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Reply #30 posted 02/17/16 7:42am

JoeBala

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"Distraught" Prince's Melbourne Show Features Multiple Vanity Tributes

Prince by Nandy Mclean, purple spire at Arts Centre by Bryget Chrisfield
Feb 17th 2016 | 10:55am | Bryget Chrisfield
As we wander down St Kilda Road, it must be noted that the Arts Centre spire is lit purple. This is Prince's second show for the evening and, as we collect our tickets, we're told audience members left after his previous 6.30pm session "crying and speechless" then tried to purchase tickets for the next sitting. There's nervous laughter in the foyers and even seasoned concertgoers experience similar anticipation to how they would've felt before their first-ever show. Booze can be taken into State Theatre as long as it's in plastic receptacles, which is unusual for this venue, and we're told by the usher that our phones cannot be "open" even though the show is yet to start. But audience members still can't resist the urge to take selfies to post and boast about how close their pricey seats are to the stage.

"He's decided to dedicate a few songs to his late mate Vanity (Denise Matthews), hearing the news of her death mere hours ago obviously shaking up his composure."

The stage is bathed in a purple wash. There's a grand piano surrounded by four low tables, which are placed around the periphery of the stage. Each table holds candles of various heights, some in candlesticks. "Open" phones are policed by ushers. It's 10pm. The lights dim. Our atmospheric intro tape is an excerpt from the Memoirs Of A Geisha film score. The cyclorama comes alive with kaleidoscopic projections. A doorway shape lights up in the centre of the cyc pattern to reveal Prince's silhouette in all its 'fro-ed glory. His Royal Purpleness walks forward wearing his own merch (but modified from what's available to fans). "He's a fucking skinny cunt," observes a charmer behind us as the crowd rise to their feet, cheering and applauding. Sure, Prince is of slight build but mind your language around royalty, mate! "Mel-Bourne!" Prince shouts into the mic, stepping away, leaving echoes of his voice behind. Repeat. He takes a seat on the piano stool and opens with The Love We Make. We're immediately spellbound. "My father showed me how to play piano," he shares, adding, "I loved my father." Prince then tells us "Batman" was one of the first songs he learned on piano. Looking like a shaman, Prince asks us to clap along at various times throughout the show. Prince also plays mean air piano.

"The first show I was a little distraught." Prince apologises to those in the house who are back for seconds. "I got some bad news." But for this concert Prince tells us he's decided to dedicate a few songs to his late mate Vanity (Denise Matthews), hearing the news of her death mere hours ago obviously shaking up his composure. Little Red Corvette closes out with Prince performing an instrumental segment from Somewhere Over The Rainbow, each note a prayer for his recently deceased former lover/protege. I Wanna Be Your Lover sees His Royal Purpleness instruct, "Let's stand up, y'all!" and we oblige. Shortly afterwards he instructs, "Siddown!" with a cheeky glint in his eye. No one gives sexy/coy side-eye quite like Prince. How Come U Don't Call Me Anymore coaxes communal goosebumps.

Prince twirls and prances off into the wings in search of a breather on occasion like a mischievous imp. After one such pause in proceedings he returns and we notice the soles of his shoes light up red with each step. Many sing along meaningfully to If I Was Your Girlfriend. During The Ladder, Prince changes some lyrics to pay further tribute to Matthews: "Now this king he had a subject named [Vanity]/Who loved him with a passion, uncontested." Black Muse becomes Raspberry Beret and how anyone departs the auditorium for toilet breaks we'll never comprehend. Paisley Park lyrics jump out and we hear them as if for the first time thanks to this piano treatment.

We score an encore. And as the melancholy descending melody of Purple Rain's intro commences we draw our collective breath. Prince pours out raw emotion and his high-pitched cries that close out this song are so agonisingly real that it's hard to watch. Prince stands, kisses fingertips and extends this arm out to us. "Thank you," he says simply and leaves the stage. It's 11.20pm.

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Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #31 posted 02/17/16 9:10am

JoeBala


Mr. Gaynes and G.W. Bailey in “Police Academy 6: City Under Siege.”CreditWarner Bros. Inc.

George Gaynes, who played a grouchy foster parent on the 1980s sitcom “Punky Brewster,” the beleaguered commandant in seven “Police Academy” films and a soap opera star with a crush on Dustin Hoffman in drag in the Hollywood hit “Tootsie,” died on Monday at his daughter’s home in North Bend, Wash. He was 98.

His death was confirmed by his daughter, Iya Gaynes Falcone Brown.

With his baritone voice, chiseled good looks and versatility as a character actor and singer, Mr. Gaynes appeared in hundreds of episodes of sitcoms and dramas on television, 35 Hollywood and made-for-TV films, and many plays, musical comedies and operas in New York and Europe.

Critics often applauded his work in supporting roles, and his face became familiar to millions of Americans. But he never achieved leading man stardom.

“Anyone who believes in happy endings will take consolation from the career of George Gaynes, about to become a television celebrity at the age of 64,” The New York Times reported (erroneously; he was 67 ) in 1984, shortly before NBC telecast the first episode of “Punky Brewster.” The show ran for four seasons, first on NBC and then in syndication.

Mr. Gaynes, in the television role for which he was probably best known, played a building manager, Henry Warnimont, who finds an abandoned little girl, played by Soleil Moon Frye, in an empty apartment and becomes first her foster parent and then her adoptive father. Their tender relationship was the heart of the show. There was a puppy, too.

“The two things an actor dreads most are children and dogs,” he told The Times in 1984. “I have both in this series.”

Mr. Gaynes got the part on the heels of two of his strongest film performances. In the first, in “Tootsie,” released in 1982, he was a misguided would-be paramour pursuing his leading lady (Mr. Hoffman), an unemployed actor who wins celebrity by masquerading as a woman on a daytime soap opera.

Then, in 1984, he was the commandant in charge of misfit recruits in the first “Police Academy” movie, which critics called crude and noisy — although some found it also hilarious — and which spawned six sequels, all of them with Mr. Gaynes in the cast.

Writing about Mr. Gaynes’s performance in “Tootsie,” Vincent Canby of The Times called him “priceless as the seedy but tirelessly lecherous leading man on the soap” and “so memorably funny in such memorably funny circumstances that I doubt he’ll much longer remain one of those actors whose looks are as familiar as his name, though one never puts the two together.”

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Mr. Gaynes played a grouchy foster parent to Soleil Moon Frye in “Punky Brewster.”CreditNBC, via Photofest

“Tootsie” was a hit and received 10 Academy Award nominations, although only Jessica Lange won, for best supporting actress.

George Gaynes was born George Jongejans in Helsinki, Finland, on May 16, 1917, to Iya Grigorievna de Gay, a Russian artist later known as Lady Iya Abny, and Gerrit Jongejans, a Dutch businessman. His uncle was the actor Gregory Gaye, who played a Nazi Reichsbank official in “Casablanca.”

Raised in France, England and Switzerland, George was introduced to opera by his mother’s friend, the Russian basso Feodor Chaliapin. He studied in Milan and performed in Italy and France. But his career was interrupted by World War II. He crossed the Pyrenees and was interned in Spain for three months. After being released, he went to Britain and enlisted in the Royal Dutch Navy for the duration.

He landed in New York after the war, joined the New York City Opera and played Figaro, Leporello in “Don Giovanni” and assorted fathers, monks and ragpickers. He also appeared in Gilbert and Sullivan operettas. But he considered himself primarily an actor. “I was an acting opera singer, and that’s one of the reasons I left opera,” he said.

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George Gaynes in 1962.CreditGeneral Artists Corporation

On Broadway, he appeared in Cole Porter’s “Out of This World” (1950) and was Rosalind Russell’s suitor in “Wonderful Town” (1953), a musical version of “My Sister Eileen” with music by Leonard Bernstein and lyrics by Betty Comden and Adolph Green.

That same year, he changed his surname to Gaynes and married Allyn Ann McLerie, an actress, who survives him.

In addition to his wife and daughter, he is survived by one granddaughter and two great-granddaughters. His son, Matthew, died in a car crash in 1989.

Mr. Gaynes appeared in many television series in the 1960s and ’70s, including “The Defenders,” “Mission: Impossible,” “Bonanza,” “Mannix,” “Hogan’s Heroes,” “The Six Million Dollar Man” and “Hawaii Five-0.” He also acted in the daytime soap operas “General Hospital” and “Search for Tomorrow.” His films included “The Way We Were,” “Altered States” and “Wag the Dog.”

He retired in 2003 and lived in Santa Barbara, Calif., before moving to Washington to stay with his daughter’s family.

Mr. Gaynes was philosophical about his brush with movie stardom in the 1980s. “I’m too old, I’ve been at it too long, to be exhilarated,” he told The Times in 1984. “Of course I’m happy about it. My wife is happy, because we can travel more, and she can get a new couch cover. But knowing the vagaries of the entertainment business, I can’t take it too seriously.”

By Andy Daglas
8 hours ago


What to watch on Wednesday, February 17...


SEASON 32 PREMIERE, 8pm, CBS
Survivor
The Cambodian island of Kaôh Rōng is the site of this brains vs. brawn vs. beauty season. “I’m a Mental Giant” kicks off the competition with the arrival of 18 castaways, one of whom later deals with the pain of the ol’ bug-in-the-ear. (That’s not, like, an expression. Actual bug, actual ear.)


8pm, The CW
Arrow
Team Arrow learns about H.I.V.E.’s plan to wipe them out, which leaves Quentin thinking Donna would be safer without him around. Meanwhile in “Code of Silence,” Oliver wrestles with guilt over his secret son as the wedding day approaches. An “I can’t afford to have loved ones” thread and a “guilty secret-keeping” thread? My, the Superhero Drudgery Gods are being generous this week!


8pm, ABC
The Middle
Dismayed by the trailer for a movie adaptation of Planet Nowhere, Brick is determined to make sure the film never sees the light of day (or rather the dark of a multiplex, as the case may be). Elsewhere in “Hecks at a Movie,” Sue sees a window of opportunity with Hunky Abercrombie Dude, and Axl and Sean learn they have shared ties to a childhood event.


8:30pm, ABC
The Goldbergs
“Weird Al” finds Adam eager to attend a concert by “Weird Al” Yankovic (guest star ”Weird Al” Yankovic, in the role he was born to play). Unfortunately, a visiting Dana doesn’t share Adam’s enthusiasm for the polka prodigy. Meanwhile, new peer counselors Erica and Barry apply their psychological expertise toward diagnosing Murray.


9pm, NBC
Law & Order: SVU
An undercover sting operation targeting an online pedophile ring nets two high-profile individuals in “Collateral Damages.”


9pm, The CW
Supernatural
Hoping that the Hand of God can defeat Amara, Dean gets Castiel (who’s actually Lucifer) to send him back to the weapon’s last known location, an ill-fated 1944 submarine mission, in “The Vessel.” Back (forward?) in the present day, Lucifer keeps up his charade with Sam, because it’s really saving on the guest-star budget.


9pm, Disney XD
Star Wars Rebels
In “Homecoming,” the rebels get in touch with freedom fighter Cham Syndulla, who’s got his hands full fighting an Imperial bombing campaign on his home planet. So the team sets out to capture the enemy carrier housing all those bombers, only to learn that Cham may have a trick of his own up his sleeve.


9pm, PBS
NOVA
“Iceman Reborn” follows a paleo-sculptor as he creates an exact replica of Otzi the Iceman to facilitate scientific and public study. The project casts light on Europe’s oldest known natural mummy, revealing new knowledge about his genetic code, way of life, and modern Stone Age fam-uh-ly.


9pm, ABC
Modern Family
A life-size cutout of Gloria is used to market her hot sauce, getting Jay hot under the collar. Elsewhere in “Thunk in the Trunk,” Mitch and Cam grow suspicious of their latest tenants, and Phil has trouble adjusting to the new normal as Claire settles into command of the closet business.


9:30pm, ABC
Black-ish
“Twindependence” sees Jack and Diane on missions of self-discovery, and sees Dre immediately regretting his decision to put Zoey behind the wheel of her first car.


SEASON 3 PREMIERE, 10pm, Comedy Central
Broad City
Clothing conundrums confound Abbi and Ilana while en route to a friend’s gallery show in “Two Chainz,” setting off a quest for a public restroom.


10pm, TV Land
Younger
“Into the Woods & Out of the Woods” sees Liza and Josh attending a music festival, one that evidently focuses on the songs of Stephen Sondheim and Taylor Swift.


10pm, ABC
American Crime
Sebastian reaches out to Anne after someone anonymously posts her medical history online in an effort to shame her. Meanwhile, Taylor continues to crack under his emotional strain, Leslie makes Evy’s father a settlement offer, and Eric seeks solace with a stranger.


10pm, NBC
Chicago P.D.
While working a sobriety checkpoint, Burgess discovers a whole mess of heroin in the possession of a college professor who pleads ignorance. As an Illinois resident, I can assure you that the “absent-minded professor defense” has a firmly established legal precedent here. Elsewhere in “A Night Owl,” Roman lets Platt know of his desire to become a field training officer, and Mouse gets Halstead a security gig at a medical marijuana clinic.


10pm, USA
Suits
Mike wants to represent himself at trial in “Self Defense,” so of course Harvey graciously steps aside and defers to his colleague’s wishes. Ha, no just kidding, Harvey totally wants to be in charge.


10pm, FXX
It’s Always Sunny in Philadelphia
“McPoyle vs. Ponderosa: The Trial of the Century” pits Liam McPoyle and the Lawyers against Bill Ponderosa in a lawsuit involving missing eyes, resurgent grievances, and serious reconsiderations about the nature of the American legal system.


10:30pm, FXX
Man Seeking Woman
Josh attempts to woo Rosa in “Cactus.” He’s watched every single Pepé Le Pew cartoon at least three times now, so he’s pretty sure he’s got this courtship thing down pat.


LATE-NITE:
– From Los Angeles, Jennifer Lopez, Snoop Dogg, and ZAYN on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, 11:35pm, NBC
Kate Hudson, Richard Dreyfuss, Gov. John Kasich, and Courtney Barnett on Late Show with Stephen Colbert, 11:35pm, CBS
– Megan Fox, Ben McKenzie, and Chris Stapleton on Jimmy Kimmel Live, 11:35pm, ABC
Will Ferrell, Hannibal Buress, and Dustin Lynch on Late Night with Seth Meyers, 12:35am, NBC
Ryan Reynolds, Katie Holmes, Judd Apatow, and Lianne La Havas on The Late Late Show with James Corden, 12:37am, CBS

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #32 posted 02/17/16 11:12am

JoeBala

Twin Cities artist Lizzo seems to have fans and collaborators in just about every pocket of the music world: Sleater-Kinney invited her to open for their reunion tour; fellow Minneapolitan Prince featured Lizzo and bandmate Sophia Eris on last year's PLECTRUMELECTRUM; Ryan Olson produced much of her debut LIZZOBANGERS. She's a true triple threat, equally searing as a rapper, soul singer, and personality and an unstoppable force on record, as amply proven with single "Batches and Cookies" (and its buttered-up hunkfest of a video) and with previous groups GRRRL PARTY and the Chalice. Big GRRRL Small World comes off as the work of an already minted star—her introduction to the small world, which she's already stepped over, laughing.

Big GRRRL Small World—named for a line on LIZZOBANGERS, and Lizzo's label BGSW, on which she released the album—finds her reckoning with her sudden fame, and also the things that plague it: white culture vultures, terrible dudes (consigned on "Ride" to the "Support Group for Men Without Lizzo," a demolishingly hilarious couple of bars), people who need her references RapGenius'd clear for them, needy people, misogynists. It's all delivered with sheer glee, and some of it is among the most wicked fun committed to record in 2015.

It also sounds gorgeous; largely produced by BJ Burton (Low, Sylvan Esso, Poliça), the album is full of unexpected turns and immaculate codas. Lizzo bends each track to her will, twisting them until they're anything but obvious. "Ain't I", the closest thing here to a LIZZOBANGER, begins with references to reparations and Russian czars but ends with a distant, slightly untuned piano interlude and distorted guitar squeals. The ballads speak the language of vulnerability but twist R&B tropes to different ends. Standout single "Humanize" begins as a shimmering post-coital reverie sung in feather-soft voice and ends smothering and alone, with a voice like the feather's sharp end.

Lizzo's lyrics on "Humanize" complicate everything, full of reversals ("your skin is warm—it keeps me up though I am tired") and pinprick-perfect lines: "No, you can't lay on my shoulder, there are spikes and scales and your cheek would just press them in." It's an exhausted, near-existential sigh: one of yearning for connection but unable to find it, particularly when the ones you're supposed to connect with are the aforementioned terrible dudes. "En Love" begins as another sumptuous soul piece, Lizzo's besotten cooing resting upon beds of '90s synth pads, until Lizzo drops the punchline—"with myself!"—and turns the track into a trap jam. Lizzo's force of personality prevents the switch up from being mere gimmick, as does her generosity; she dedicates a verse to her best friend, and to her listeners.

Indeed, the most straightforward tracks on Big GRRRL Small World, such as empowerment ballad "My Skin", are explicitly about and for everyone who looks like and looks up to her. This—not only her indie friends, or her crystalline production, and especially not her place in any made-up taxonomy of female rappers she's been placed into—is largely responsible for her whirlwind success, and Lizzo knows it. "I love that because I am a woman and because I rap and I look the way I look, I can connect with the demographic of people who feel like they have a voice in me," Lizzo told Billboard. "I get to speak to these people who did not get spoken for in this genre." Big GRRRL Small World succeeds because it's just that: a showcase for the small world, a keepsake for the big grrrls.

Correction: An earlier version of this review incorrectly stated that Bon Iver's Justin Vernon produced LIZZOBANGERS.

DISCOVERY: MORLY


02/10/16



There's a quote that's been variously attributed to Frank Zappa, Elvis Costello, and Laurie Anderson, among others, that "writing about music is like dancing about architecture." Something is lost in the translation between two media, yet something might also be gained. Likewise, a song's lyrics often express something that the music alone can't quite render. "I find that I usually have a feeling, just a feeling, and it makes a melody," says singer/songwriter/producer Katy Morley, who records under the alias Morly. "But I won't have lyrics for it until I understand the situation better." This was the case for her most recent single, "The Choir," the video for which is premiering below. Morly had begun to compose the track, but felt it was chronically lacking. "I was stuck, and I wasn't sure what it needed," she says. Then she pauses. "I have such a hard time talking about music." At this point, we circle back to the Zappa-Costello-Anderson quote. "What it needed" came in the form of a fortuitous visit to a gospel choir to film a video for another song—the footage from which now composes the video for "The Choir," as she scrapped the other video altogether.

"The Choir" is an enchanting display of restraint, an effort to reconcile Morly's relationship to her music through her music. "Shirley calls for me to join in next to Fabra's sweet tenor," Morly sings, referring to women in the choir who inspired the track. "But I don't see a place for me, and I'm too quiet to be heard." Directed by long-time collaborator Gina Gammell, the moody video features sinewy choreography by rapper and dancer Briddy that complements the track's minimalism.

Morly has finished her upcoming EP (slated for an April release), although it contrasts her previous work, she says, featuring "more lyrical, more traditional" music. Last summer's In Defense of My Muse EP, weaves together a sonic tapestry of noise, with vocals playing a secondary role. (A breathy "ha-ha" introduces "Seraphese," a track otherwise devoid of vocals, but grounded in the juxtaposition of delicate piano and the hum of a synthesizer.) "The Choir," Morly's first "singing song," marks yet another right-turn for an artist who got her start being one part of the 22-member Minnesota-based project Gayngs, which counts the likes of Justin Vernon—alter ego Bon Iver—and Phil Cook of Megafaun.

We caught up with Morly by phone, when she was at her adopted home of Los Angeles just before jetting off for a spate of rehearsals in preparation for SXSW.

NAME: Katy Morley

AGE: 28

HOMETOWN: Minneapolis, Minnesota

EARLY EXPOSURE: I suppose I'd always written songs as a kid—just terrible little kid's songs—but I didn't really start producing until 2010. When I was a kid, my school had a really good musical program. We would always start on xylophone and recorder, but then I did four years of saxophone. I did jazz band in middle school and I was one of two girls. The boys were just relentless in teasing me, like, girls can't play saxophone and those kind of things, and the teacher didn't really do anything. I just couldn't do it, so I switched over to choir. Then I started taking guitar, and, of course, started on piano as well—did, like, seven years of piano as a kid. A good smattering. I'm not a master in anything, which is great.

MUSICAL MEMORIES: Ultimately, I grew up on Bonnie Raitt, Fleetwood Mac, and I just love a good song. My dad is such a musical person. My oldest memory is dancing to MC Hammer with him, and we used to blast Phantom of the Opera and sing Phantom of the Opera together. My mom is a painter—she's really artistic—but my dad is more the musical one.

AN EDUCATION: I went to college. I was a massive nerd, big academics girl my whole life. I decided to study neuroscience because it's this completely unexplored field of the human mind. But I started working in the laboratory and realized I don't have the constitution for lab work. I last-minute did painting as my major, neuroscience as my minor, and graduated college and just felt really depressed and didn't know why. I realized it was because I wanted to make music and I was ignoring it because it didn't seem like a possibility. No one in my family had ever made music. It seemed like this very far-fetched, irrational thing. I think it's like Bob Dylan said—he felt like he was born very far away from where he was supposed to be. So I started just kind of making music in my bedroom and working in cafés and such and ended up singing on a friend's project, which is called Gayngs. They needed one more female singer. No one knew I sang except for my best friend, who was dating one of the guys. I was terrified, but they liked what I did, so I got to be a part of that project. Meeting and befriending all of the musicians in Gayngs made me realize that it is very possible to have a career as a musician.

LOOKING FOR A SIGN: I was terrified of singing in front of people, but [Gayngs] had to perform at First Avenue, which is Minneapolis's big club—it's the club that broke Prince. I had to sing in front of 2,000 people and just get over that fear. It was only for one song. I got off stage and I was just so elated that I had done it and felt like I did a really good job. I started running back stage and I ran into Prince. He was just in the little hallway behind the stage, and he smiled at me so big and I just kind of stepped aside and let him pass. I think that if you're ever looking for a sign, that felt like a sign. He's this mythical figure—occasionally, there's a rumor that Prince is in the club. He had a guitar strapped around him; he was going to play on stage with everyone. Then he just vanished in a cloud of purple smoke. He just disappeared.

FEVER DREAM: I think everyone thought I was a little confused [when I decided to do music]. I had mono, really bad mono, and I think everyone just thought I was a little sick and I'll get my wits about me soon enough. Then, I think it turned into concern, because no one really wants to hear that their kid wants to be a professional artist. [My parents] were supportive, but definitely concerned for my financial security. I think I heard a lot of, "I kind of see you as a professor," or, "You're really good at science." When I performed at First Ave., I think they both realized that I was pretty serious about it.

ART AND MUSIC: I'm not a synesthetic, but I definitely see things when I hear music—but not in any sort of narrative way. Studying painting, I just hated how political the art world was and music felt like this break from that, so making music was actually a way to take painting to a different medium. To paint with sound.

REALITY CHECK: I was living in Minneapolis in a very affordable house with my best friend and I was just working on getting better [from 2010 to 2014]. I was living in headphones trying to get better at producing—and writing songs, as well, but really just producing. People used to ask me how my stuff was, and I'd be like, "It's okay." They'd be like, "Get more confidence—you need to sell yourself." But I felt it's actually good to know when your stuff is bad and that will keep you working. When you're first starting out it's not going to be that good. It's just not going to be. I think it's helpful to know it's bad but keep working with faith that it will get better as you do it more.

SOLO ACT: The traditional role of producer is very different from how people use that term. Traditionally, a producer helps an artist realize their vision. I've produced one other person, but mostly I only produce myself. I think it's kind of evolved to mean an electronic beat-maker. I worked with this boy Seramic, and co-produced one of his songs. So I guess technically I am now a producer, since I've worked with someone other than myself. I'm just the type of person who wants to learn how to do everything myself. But also, when I was first starting out, it was really important for me to produce myself in order to find my own sound. Having an inside look into the music industry, I realized what a complete boys' club it is. So I decided to learn production in part to opt out of the sexual politics that so many female musicians face. I also thought it was important in finding my own voice because I was very unsure about my sound and would have been quite malleable to whichever producer I worked with.

GENDER TROUBLE: When I first started putting out music, a lot of people assumed I was a guy. I got a fair amount of "sick remix bro" feedback. Because I'm so new to it all—and maybe also so independent—I haven't experienced too many gender-based difficulties, aside from some surprise or doubt about my artistic and technical abilities. I've heard some pretty awful stories from more veteran ladies. It's been really encouraging lately though because it seems like the industry is actively trying to combat its own sexism, like the response to Amber Coffman's coming forward about being sexually harassed.

IN DEFENSE OF HER MUSE: I think all of my music has been a process of justifying making music, just because it's taken me so long to convince myself that it's okay to do this, and that my voice is worthwhile and it's a valid thing for me to be spending my time doing. I think because it was such a foreign thing for me, it's taken a while to realize this is my reality. I can be doing this for a career.

UP NEXT... After the EP, I suppose that elusive album. I have a pretty good idea of what I would want an album to sound like. I would also like to perform. I really like playing for people, so I would like to put together a nice band and play.

(via SoundCloud)https://soundcloud.com/morlymusic
FOR MORE ON MORLY, VISIT HER FACEBOOK.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #33 posted 02/18/16 2:08pm

JoeBala


What to watch on Thursday, February 18...


8pm, CBS
The Big Bang Theory
The gang celebrates news of Bernadette’s pregnancy with a round of karaoke in “The Positive Negative Reaction.” But father-to-be Howard is singing a less happy tune, stressing about making enough money to support the baby.


8pm, ABC
Grey’s Anatomy
As the staff tend to Meredith’s recovery, Callie and Maggie undertake a high-risk experimental surgery on Alex’s patient over his objections. (Hey, if he can think of a better way to remove Water on the Knee than with those little metal tweezers, they’d like to hear it.) Elsewhere in “All I Want Is You,” friction remains between Owen and Nathan, while things are looking decidedly more positive for Maggie and Andrew’s relationship.


8pm, The CW
DC’s Legends of Tomorrow
With teammates imprisoned in a cold country during the Cold War, it’s up to Captain Cold to lead an escape plan in “Fail-Safe.” As they attempt to bust out of a Russian gulag, Rip assigns Sara a secret side quest that could doom them all.


8pm, NBC
You, Me and the Apocalypse
Jamie and Dave try to track down Ariel by visiting his mother in a psychiatric hospital, Spike hacks into the NSA in an effort to reunite with Rhonda, and the Holy See dispatches Father Christophe to help Jude and Celine search for a messiah in “What Happens to Idiots.”


8:30pm, CBS
Life in Pieces
The family is upset by John’s attempts to restore his youthful glow in “Hair Recital Rainbow Mom.” In other affairs, Matt meets Colleen’s mom (Mercedes Ruehl), Heather fears the worst for Sophia’s piano recital, and Jen, Greg, and Lark attend a birthday party full of Type-A parents.


9pm, ABC
Scandal
A profile piece on Fitz sparks conflict between Abby and Cyrus in “The Candidate.” How dare it report that the president is a Harry stan when he’s clearly all in on Zayn! (I think I used at least half of those words correctly.) Elsewhere, Mellie gets more than she bargained for when she enlists Olivia’s help, and Liz encourages Susan Ross to make a bid for the White House.


9pm, The CW
The 100
Clarke’s hope for peace is thwarted by the emergence of a new threat, and also by the fact that this is The 100. Meanwhile in “Hakeldama,” Murphy plays a dangerous game of deceit.


9pm, NBC
The Blacklist
Red has an inkling who may have murdered an internet startup entrepreneur in “Drexel,” so he and Liz investigate a notorious underground news source. It may be hard times for traditional media, but it’s good to see that the Bad Guys Times-Picayune is still going strong.


9pm, CBS
Mom
Marjorie announces that she’s getting married in “Diabetic Lesbians and a Blushing Bride,” and Christy and Bonnie vow to make the big day a smash success. But will guest star Rhea Perlmanhelp or hinder their efforts?


9pm, Bravo
Top Chef
Upon arriving in Oakland, the chefs don their finest parachute pants and prepare dishes for MC Hammer in “Hammer Time.” Then Top Chef Master Jonathan Waxman tasks the contestants with conjuring food from influential food eras.


NEW NIGHT, 9:30pm, CBS
2 Broke Girls
Caroline takes the stage to recount her journey down the economic ladder in “And the Story Telling Show,” and her tale captures the interest of a Hollywood exec. Elsewhere, Sophie and Oleg try to find the right surrogate.


SEASON 4 PREMIERE, 10pm, History
Vikings
Stuff is going down all around while Ragnar recuperates from illness in “A Good Treason,” and the worst part is the sick-day Netflix marathon won’t be invented for another millennium. Bjorn orders Floki’s arrest for Athelstan’s murder, Rollo backstabs his way into a stronger position at the French court, and Kalf announces an uneasy Earldom alliance with Lagertha.


SERIES FINALE, 10pm, BBC America
London Spy
Danny discovers the truth about Alex’s fate, including what occurred in the attic on his last night. [Cue dramatic music] […] Oh come ON, Karen, how is the Dramatic Music Player busted already, we just bought it! Well get it fixed, we need it for the next blurb too.


10pm, ABC
How to Get Away With Murder
Bad vibes beset the Keating household as the students attempt to regain the status quo ante in “She Hates Us.” In flashbacks, more of Annalise’s past is revealed. [Cue dramatic music] [...] Sigh. No, forget it now. Call the repair guy to look at it this weekend.


10pm, CBS
Elementary
“A Study in Charlotte” finds Holmes and Watson investigating the murder of a botany professor and some students via poisonous mushrooms. Of course, if they had ingested green and white polka-dotted mushrooms instead, they would have all gained an extra life. Nature is a rich tapestry. Back at the Brownstone, Joan deals with a neighbor (Richard Kind) who’s renting his home to party-hearty tenants.


10pm, USA
Colony
Trapped in the Yonk by a Resistance operation in “Yoknapatawpha,” Will, Katie, and Snyder have their loyalties put to the test.


10pm, IFC
Portlandia
Claire’s had all she can stand and she can’t stand no more of Doug’s immaturity in “Breaking Up.” But when the parted paramours begin dating new people, they learn new things about themselves.


10pm, Comedy Central
Workaholics
“Going Viral” sees the boys shooting for social media glory. Personally I’ve never seen the appeal of the internet. Never go on it, myself. I write these columns out in longhand and then send them to Kaitlin by registered mail, as God intended.


10pm, NBC
Shades of Blue
Harlee tries to shield Saperstein from Wozniak, even as the guilt-ridden lieutenant steels himself to finish what he started. Meanwhile in “Undiscovered Country,” Stahl gets closer to the truth about Harlee and Miguel’s relationship.


10pm, Spike
Lip Sync Battle
The age-old battle between comedy and mixed martial arts is joined once more, as Gabriel Iglesias and Randy Couture square off.


10:30pm, Comedy Central
Idiotsitter
Kent’s emotions get the better of him when Gene’s birth mom visits in “Mother’s Day.” Elsewhere, Billie’s date reveals an unexpected wild side. [Dramatic music plays] NOW it kicks in? No, Karen, this is a comedy! Shut it down.


SERIES PREMIERE, 11pm & 11:30pm, History
Join or Die with Craig Ferguson
Craig Ferguson hosts panel discussions about timely topics and matters of historical note in this talk show. The premiere welcomes Jimmy Kimmel, comedian Jen D’Angelo, and PR expert Howard Bragman to debate history’s biggest political blunder. In the second episode, Chris Hardwick, comedian Jordan Carlos and scientist Bob Pflugfelder delve into history’s worst medical advice.


LATE-NITE:
– From Los Angeles, Vince Vaughn, Ryan Seacrest, and Dead & Company on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, 11:35pm, NBC
– Téa Leoni, Amanda Peet, Triumph the Insult Comic Dog, and cross-country Citibiker Jeffrey Tanenhaus on Late Show with Stephen Colbert, 11:35pm, CBS
– Kerry Washington, Nikolaj Coster-Waldau, and Jason Derulo on Jimmy Kimmel Live, 11:35pm, ABC
– Kiefer Sutherland and Carice van Houten on Late Night with Seth Meyers, 12:35am, NBC
– Katie Couric, Gillian Jacobs, and Anders Holm on The Late Late Show with James Corden, 12:37am, CBS

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #34 posted 02/19/16 4:57am

Identity



The CW has released the first clip from Megalyn Echikunwoke's live-action debut as Vixen. The character is called in by Oliver Queen (Stephan Amell) as back-up to turn the tide against Damien Darhk (Neal McDonough).

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Reply #35 posted 02/19/16 7:35am

JoeBala

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #36 posted 02/19/16 7:48am

JoeBala

Prince Collaborator Apollonia Pays Tribute to 'Inspiration' Vanity

"She was a pioneer [and] a strong woman," actress and singer says. "She was a diva; the princess of funk"

BY KORY GROW February 18, 2016
Apollonia; Vanity; Tribute; 2016
Prince collaborator Apollonia has paid tribute to Vanity, whom she called an "inspiration" Jason LaVeris/Getty; Ebet Roberts/Getty

Purple Rain actress and singer Apollonia Kotero remembered Vanity, a collaborator of Prince's who died earlier this week, as a role model.

"She was an inspiration to me, just like she was to all the ladies that followed," she told The Associated Press. "She was a pioneer, a strong woman, she was a diva, the princess of funk ... the audiences absolutely adored her."

Kotero replaced Vanity in the 1984 movie Purple Rain, but did not meet her until the late Eighties. The women had fallen out of touch in recent years, but Kotero said they kept up with one another on social media.

Vanity, whose real name was Denise Matthews, had begun her career as a model but after meeting Prince at the 1980 American Music Awards, she launched a music and acting career with help from the singer-songwriter. He helped her put together a trio, Vanity 6, and produced and wrote most of their 1982 self-titled debut. She was in a relationship with Prince at the time but broke things off with him in 1984. "I needed one person to love me, and he needed more," she told People that year.

Prior to their breakup, she was supposed to star in Purple Rain alongside Prince, but they ended up severing all ties. Prince found Kotero, whose real name is Apollonia, in a casting call and positioned her as the frontwoman of Apollonia 6, a group whose other two members previously sang in Vanity 6. The group fell apart in 1985.

Kotero told The AP that she still owns the Rolling Stone issue that featured Princ... the cover. "[When I saw it], I thought, I wish I could do that someday," she said. "I want to be like them; I want to be special like them."

Prince also paid tribute to Vanity at a recent Melbourne concert, where he dedicated "Little Red Corvette" in her honor. "Can I tell you a story about Vanity? Or should I tell you a story about Denise?" he said at one point. "Her and I used to love each other deeply. She loved me for the artist I was, I loved her for the artist she was trying to be. She and I would fight. She was very headstrong 'cause she knew she was the finest woman in the world. She never missed an opportunity to tell you that."

Eric Clapton Announces New Album 'I Still Do'

Record pairs him with 'Slowhand' producer Glynn Johns

BY KORY GROW February 18, 2016
Eric Clapton

Eric Clapton will put out a new album, 'I Still Do,' this spring Brian Rasic/WireImage/Getty

Eric Clapton will put out his 23rd solo album, I Still Do, this spring.

The singer teamed with producer Glyn Johns, who has previously worked with the Rolling Stones, Eagles, Led Zeppelin and the Who and on Clapton's own 1977 LP, Slowhand, home of the hits "Cocaine," "Wonderful Tonight" and "Lay Down Sally." The new record will come out on May 20th via Clapton's own Bushbranch imprint, in association with Surfdog Records.

"This was a long and overdue opportunity to work with Glyn Johns again, and also, incidentally, the 40th anniversary of Slowhand," Clapton said in a statement.

Some of the songs on I Still Do are Clapton originals. The musicians on the record include many who have worked with Clapton in the past, including drummer Henry Spinetti, bassist Dave Bronze, guitarist Andy Fairweather Low and organist Paul Carrack, among others.

The album art features an illustration of Clapton by artist Sir Peter Blake, who previously co-designed the sleeve for the Beatles'Sgt. Pepper's Lonely Hearts Club Band, the Who's Face Dances and others.

I Still Do follows up Clapton's 2014 record Eric Clapton & Friends: The Breeze, An Appreciation of JJ Cale. Clapton told Rolling Stone that year that he was planning on writing and recording another LP when head heard about the death of Cale, a singer-songwriter, in 2013. "I always play into the unknown," he said of his guitar habits at the time. "I don't practice things that are known to me unless I'm getting ready to do live work. Most of the time, it's abstract, like picking up a pencil and paper and drawing what's in front of me. It's improvised, always."

I Still Do Track List

1. "Alabama Woman Blues"
2. "Can't Let You Do It"
3. "I Will Be There"
4. "Spiral"
5. "Catch the Blues"
6. "Cypress Grove"
7. "Little Man, You've Had a Busy Day"
8. "Stones in My Passway"
9. "I Dreamed I Saw St. Augustine"
10. "I'll Be Alright"
11. "Somebody's Knockin'"
12. "I'll Be Seeing You"

The Ballad of Mike Love

A Beach Boy asks, "Why am I the villain?"

BY ERIK HEDEGAARD February 17, 2016
Mike Love's Cosmic Journey; Beach Boys

Beach Boys singer Mike Love has been meditating for 49 years. Why is it so hard for him to find peace? Photograph by Bryce Duffy

Mike Love bounds up the stairs inside his massive Lake Tahoe home (10 bedrooms in all, 12 bathrooms, two elevators, not to be believed) and into a large walk-in closet stuffed to overflowing with garish, multicolored shirts and a gazillion baseball caps, many of them emblazoned with the name of his band, the Beach Boys. A suitcase rests on the floor. Love nods at it, prods it with his foot. "A lot more shirts are in there," he says, "because, if you must know, I haven't unpacked."

Full article: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/features/the-ballad-of-mike-love-20160217

Emilia Clarke Eyes MGM Romantic Comedy ‘Set It Up’

Emilia Clarke Eyes MGM Romantic Comedy

DAVID FISHER/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK
FEBRUARY 18, 2016 | 03:20PM PT

Dave McNary

Film Reporter@Variety_DMcNary

MGM has offered “Game of Thrones” star Emilia Clarke the lead role in the romantic comedy “Set It Up” with Justin Nappi’s Treehouse Pictures.

The studio has acquired Katie Silberman’s spec script, in which two overwhelmed assistants set up their tyrannical bosses romantically in order to get them out of their hair. Clarke is not yet attached to the role.

Clarke, 29, has been nominated twice for a Primetime Emmy for her portrayal of the exiled Daenerys Targaryen on HBO’s “Game of Thrones” and played Sarah Conner in “Terminator Genisys.” The British actress will be seen next opposite Sam Claflin on the Warner Bros.-MGM drama “Me Before You,” which opens in June.

Silberman is a co-producer on Warner Bros.’ romantic comedy “How to Be Single,” starring Dakota Johnson and Rebel Wilson, and co-produced Reese Witherspoon’s comedy “Hot Pursuit.”

CAA represents Clarke and Silberman. Clarke is also repped by Emptage Hallett in the U.K.

The news was first reported by Deadline Hollywood.

Stockard Channing to Star in NBC’s ‘Me & Mean Margaret’ Pilot

CAROLYN CONTINO/BEI/REX SHUTTERSTOCK
FEBRUARY 18, 2016 | 01:30PM PT

Laura Prudom

News Editor@lauinla

Stockard Channing has landed the lead role in NBC comedy pilot “Me & Mean Margaret,” Varietyhas learned.

The pilot is described as an unlikely buddy comedy that follows a fiercely candid and often offensive legendary actress (Channing) and the ambitious 27-year-old lawyer forced to babysit her.

The multi-cam comedy is written by Adam Barr (“Will & Grace,” “The New Adventures of Old Christine”), and hails from Universal Television and Chernin Entertainment. Barr and Peter Chernin will executive produce.

Channing, who famously played Rizzo in the original “Grease” film, most recently had small-screen roles including a guest spot on NBC’s “Mysteries of Laura” and a recurring role on CBS’ “Good Wife” as the mother of Julianna Margulies’ titular character. She’ll next appear as Elizabeth Taylor in UK broadcaster Sky Arts’ comedic telepic “Elizabeth, Michael and Marlon” alongside Brian Cox as Marlon Brando and Joseph Fiennes as Michael Jackson — a casting move that has drawn its fair share of controversy.

NBC’s ‘Hairspray Live’ Musical Set for December Debut, Original Creative Team on Board for TV Special

NBC Hairspray Live

MOVIESTORE COLLECTION/REX SHUTTERSTOCK
FEBRUARY 18, 2016 | 01:22PM PT

Elizabeth Wagmeister

@EWagmeister

NBC’s latest live musical “Hairspray Live” will premiere on Wednesday, Dec. 7, the network announced today.

Much of the original stage production’s creative team will return for NBC’s live televised special.

Along with previously announced exec producers Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, Kenny Leon, who most recently directed “The Wiz Live” for the network, has been tapped to direct. Original “Hairspray” choreographer Jerry Mitchell is on board to choreograph, and Harvey Fierstein, who played the role of Edna in the stage musical, will write the script adaptation. Original “Hairspray” songwriters Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman are also back for NBC’s next TV musical.

“Hairspray Live” marks the fourth television musical event for NBC, coming after this past December’s “The Wiz Live,” which followed the net’s first special “Sound of Music Live” in 2013 and then “Peter Pan Live” in 2014. Fox recently got into the game with “Grease Live” this January.

“In keeping with our desire to bring the best of Broadway to our live musicals, we’ve assembled the Broadway dream team of Tony Award winners for ‘Hairspray Live,’” said Robert Greenblatt, chairman of NBC Entertainment. “We’re thrilled to have director Kenny Leon, who knocked ‘The Wiz Live’ way out of the park, and Jerry Mitchell, the original choreographer of ‘Hairspray’ and who is the director of two smash hit musicals running on Broadway right now.”

Greenblatt added, “We also have one of the most celebrated Broadway hyphenates, Harvey Fierstein, back writing the adaptation for TV. No one knows ‘Hairspray’ better than him since he played the role of Edna Turnblad more than a thousand times and won the Tony Award for best actor in a musical. Along with our incredible producing team of Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, and arguably the best songwriting team in musicals, Marc Shaiman and Scott Wittman, ‘Hairspray Live’ is in the best possible hands.”

“Hairspray Live” is based on John Waters’ original 1988 film, starring Ricki Lake, and subsequent musical stage production, which ran on Broadway from 2002 until 2009. In 2007, a “Hairspray” movie based on the musical hit theaters (pictured), starring Nikki Blonsky, John Travolta, Zac Efron, Amanda Bynes and Queen Latifah.

The cast for “Hairspray Live” will be announced at a later date.

TV News Roundup: Justin Long & Niecy Nash Book Comedy Pilots; First Look at ‘RuPaul’s Drag Race’

Niecy Nash the enforcers fix

VARIETY REX SHUTTERSTOCK
FEBRUARY 18, 2016 | 12:27PM PT

Elizabeth Wagmeister

@EWagmeister

Pilot season casting continues, as Justin Long and Niecy Nash both land lead roles in comedy projects. Meanwhile, Gigi Hadid and more guest judges have been tapped for Season 8 of “RuPaul’s Drag Race,” in today’s TV news roundup . . .

Casting News:

Justin Long will star in ABC’s soccer comedy pilot “Dream Team.” He will play Marty Schumacher, the eternally optimistic manager of a sporting goods store and the head coach of a nationally ranked soccer program. The potential series centers around his character, who coached his last club soccer team for 10 years, ultimately taking them to the national championships. Now, he has to start from scratch with a diverse group of 8-year-olds and their disparate parents.

“Dream Team” will also star Michael Mosely, Lindsey Kraft and Michelle Buteau. The sports comedy hails from “Will & Grace” alums Bill Wrubel and Kari Lizer.

Niecy Nash will co-star in Fox’s female buddy cop comedy pilot “The Enforcers.” She will play one half of the central duo, two wildly different single mothers with dreams of being police officers who find themselves partnered as inspectors in the Code Enforcement Department, where instead of fighting crime, they have been relegated to handling petty code breaking like noise complaints, tree trimming and water misuse.

Nash’s character is described as a fun, outspoken, recently divorced single mom of two kids who, after struggling through a variety of odd jobs to provide for her children, is thrilled to land the job of code cop, hoping it will bring her a sense of legitimacy — but it doesn’t.

The casting marks a continuation at Fox for Nash, who also starred as an enforcement type — a security guard — on the network’s “Scream Queens.”

Late Night News:

Ben Affleck, Tracy Morgan, J.K. Simmons, Mike Tyson, Nathan Lane, Matthew Broderick, Henry Cavill, Jesse Eisenberg and more will appear on the 11th annual “Jimmy Kimmel Live: After the Oscars” special, which airs live Sunday, Feb. 28, on ABC, after the award show. The special may also welcome Affleck’s buddy Matt Damon — from today’s press release: “possibly even Oscar loser Matt Damon, time-permitting.”

More TV Tidbits:

Joe Morton has been upped to a series regular on “Scandal,” meaning Rowan aka Papa Pope will be around to rile up Olivia (Kerry Washington) for good. Morton’s promotion was first reported byTHR. He won an Emmy for the role in 2014.

Indie filmmaker Craig William Macneill (“The Boy,” “Henley”) will direct all six episodes of Syfy’s new horror anthology series “Channel Zero: Candle Cove,” which premieres this October.

“Candle Cove” centers on a man’s obsessive recollections of a mysterious children’s television program from the 1980s, and his ever-growing suspicions about the role it might have played in a series of nightmarish and deadly events from his childhood.

“Craig is a gifted young film director whose cinematic vision will bring a unique perspective to ‘Channel Zero: Candle Cove,’ ” said Bill McGoldrick, executive vice president of scripted content at NBCUniversal Cable Entertainment.

First Look:

Nicole Richie, Gigi Hadid, Marc Jacobs, David and Amy Sedaris, Debbie Harry and Chris Stein of Blondie, Ester Dean, Faith Evans, Jamal Sims, Chanel Iman, Todrick Hall, Thomas Roberts, Tasha Smith and Vivica A. Fox will all serve as guest judges on the eighth season of “RuPaul’s Drag Race.” The new season debuts March 7 at 9 p.m. on Logo with a 90-minute premiere episode.

Jessica Chastain Launching Freckle Films Production Company

Jessica Chastain

ERIK PENDZICH/REX/SHUTTERSTOCK
FEBRUARY 18, 2016 | 10:11AM PT

Dave McNary

Film Reporter@Variety_DMcNary

Jessica Chastain has launched production company Freckle Films, where she will serve as president alongside development executive Elise Siegel.

Freckle Films has entered into a first-look overhead deal with Maven Pictures, headed by Celine Rattray (“The Kids Are All Right”) and Trudie Styler (“Still Alice,” “Lock, Stock and Two Smoking Barrels”) along with Charlotte Ubben.

Maven will provide development funds and cover overhead costs to acquire projects such as books, screenplays, plays and intellectual properties for Freckle Films and Maven to jointly produce. Jacqui Lewis, Leili Gerami, Clemens Pongratz and Elise Siegel will serve as executive producers on these films.

“I’m excited to launch Freckle Films, and I can’t imagine a better production partner than Maven Pictures,” said Chastain. “Trudie and Celine are not only both highly experienced and successful producers, but the projects they’ve created demonstrate their tenacious dedication to strong characters and compelling stories that clearly resonate with audiences. It’s an honor to work with them, as well as their company, one that mirrors many of the goals that I aspire to achieve with Freckle Films.”

Rattray said: “Trudie and I have always been great admirers of Jessica both on screen and off. Her intelligence, passion and talent are something that so naturally align with our work and mission at Maven Pictures — showcasing female talent both in front of and behind the camera. We are immensely thrilled about the opportunity to work together for many years to come.”

Freckle Films and Maven have a number of films in various stages of early development and have already optioned two books: “The Magician’s Lie” by Greer Macallister and Camille Pagan’s latest novel, “Life and Other Near-Death Experiences.”

Chastain has come on board John Madden’s “Miss Sloane” and recently wrapped production for Focus Features’ film adaptation of Diane Ackerman’s novel “The Zookeeper’s Wife” opposite Daniel Brühl. She will next be seen alongside Chris Hemsworth, Charlize Theron and Emily Blunt in “The Huntsman: Winter’s War” for Universal.

Maven Pictures recently wrapped filming on “American Honey” and “Freak Show.”

The news was first reported by Deadline Hollywood.


What to watch on Friday, February 19...


SERIES PREMIERE, 12:01am Pacific, Netflix
Love
Gillian Jacobs and Paul Rust star in this comedy created by Judd Apatow, which casts a humorous eye on the foibles of modern dating from the perspectives of Venus and Mars. The 10-episode first season streams today.


SERIES PREMIERE, 12:01am Pacific, Netflix
Cooked
This four-episode documentary series, from food writer Michael Pollan and filmmaker Alex Gibney, explores the core elements of cooking and the variety of culinary traditions around the world. Included: a unique Peruvian brewing method, a river-powered granary in Morocco, and an Aboriginal tribe that fire-roasts monitor lizards. Not included: the American knack for stuffing any kind of processed food into a pizza crust.


8pm, The CW
The Vampire Diaries
Stefan and Valerie scramble to save Caroline and her babies in the wake of pregnancy complications in “This Woman’s Work.” Meanwhile, Enzo blackmails Damon into helping him track down Rayna Cruz—which inadvertently leads the vampire hunter right to the the gang’s doorstep. Bang-up job as always, Damon.


8pm, Fox
Sleepy Hollow
The Kindred is back in “Kindred Spirits,” but the team is baffled to learn that he’s gone Dark Side. Meanwhile, Ichabod realizes that his dalliance with Zoe has had a ripple effect.


8pm, ABC
Last Man Standing
Eve and Cammy don’t exactly make beautiful music together in “Eve’s Band,” so Mike schemes to break them up. Meanwhile, Kyle and Mandy babysit Boyd.


8:30pm, ABC
Dr. Ken
Ken hits the dance floor in “The Wedding Sitter,” but his groove isn’t in Allison’s heart. At least they attended the right ceremony, unlike Damona, Julie, and Clark. Back home, Dave gets a friend (Fresh Off the Boat’s Ian Chen) to impersonate him so he can escape being babysat.


8:30pm, Disney
Girl Meets World
Maya is miffed when Riley redecorates their sanctum sanctorum in “Girl Meets the Bay Window.” “This is just like when Felicity cut her hair!” he joked, before realizing much of this show’s target audience was negative-five-years-old when that happened.


9pm, PBS
American Masters
“Carole King: Natural Woman” profiles the prolific singer-songwriter, whose body of work includes more than 400 songs that have been covered by more than 1,000 artists, the multi-platinum album Tapestry, and the Gilmore Girls theme song that is now stuck in your head. The documentary includes performance footage, interviews with friends and colleagues, and reflections from King herself.


9pm, The CW
The Originals
Aurora devises a trap for Elijah and Klaus, with Freya as the bait. Elsewhere in “Heart Shaped Box,” Davina conjures up Kol (the 1.0 version) to help her perform a spell for the Strix’s coven that could save her loved ones’ lives.


9pm, NBC
Grimm
A call from Monroe’s relative in Germany could bring Nick closer to his ancestors in “Map of the Seven Knights,” but the Black Claw sticks their noses in that business too. Meanwhile, Capt. Renard helps a mayoral candidate gain an advantage, which must violate some sort of election law seeing as he’s a civil servant, right?


9pm, CBS
Hawaii Five-0
McGarrett teams up with a young autistic man to solve the murder of the man’s only friend in “Ke Koa Lokomaika’i (The Good Soldier).” Elsewhere, the FBI questions Danny’s mother.


11pm, Cartoon Network
Childrens Hospital
“The Show You Watch” reminisces about a popular 1950s variety show and the roots of Childrens Hospital.


LATE-NITE:
– From Los Angeles, Bryan Cranston, Demi Lovato, and The Weeknd on The Tonight Show Starring Jimmy Fallon, 11:35pm, NBC
– Chelsea Handler, Zosia Mamet, and The Lumineers on Late Show with Stephen Colbert, 11:35pm, CBS

Alejandro G. Iñárritu: Hollywood's King of Pain

How the director of "The Revenant" pushed his stars and crew to the edge of sanity – and created a modern epic

BY MARK BINELLI February 17, 2016
Alejandro G. Iñárritu; Director; Revenant

Director Alejandro González Iñárritu is nominated for Best Director for his sixth film, "The Revenant" Photograph by Martin Schoeller

Late one afternoon in November, only two days after wrapping up final post-production tweaks on his sixth film, The Revenant, the director Alejandro González Iñárritu walked into a screening room at the corner of Alfred Hitchcock Drive on the Universal Studios lot in Universal City, California. He was dressed entirely in black, his typical uniform – today, a couture-looking hoodie with extraneous silver zippers, worn over black jeans – and he greeted the assembled audio crew with fist bumps and apologies for his tardiness. He'd driven up from his production office in Santa Monica, where he also lives, and hit traffic, which he normally avoids by zipping around town on a Vespa. Somebody got him a Coke.

Full Article: http://www.rollingstone.com/movies/features/alejandro-g-inarritu-hollywoods-king-of-pain-20160217

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #37 posted 02/19/16 8:35am

JoeBala

Mickey Dolenz With Nile Rodgers at Grammy Awards - Staples Center.

with Donna Dolenz — at Grammys at Staples Center.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #38 posted 02/19/16 6:19pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

A REAL David Bowie tribute from those who knew him...

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

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #39 posted 02/19/16 7:47pm

JoeBala

Thanks PT! Who is performing?

biggrin biggrin biggrin cool

Steve Martin Performed Stand-up Last Night for the First Time in 35 Years

By

The Tonight Show Starring Johnny Carson
Steve Martin performs on The Tonight Show on October 28, 1976. Photo: NBC/Getty Images

Around 8:04 p.m. last night, the lights dimmed at New York's Beacon Theatre and Frank Sinatra's "New York, New York" played over the PA. I wouldn't call it the most surprising choice, considering that the audience was there to see Jerry Seinfeld's second show in a yearlong residency at the storied venue. Then an announcer came on — "Good evening, New York City, and welcome to the 2016 Jerry Seinfeld show" — and I, like everyone else, didn't even stop the conversation I was having, it was so innocuous. "Please welcome Jerry's very special guest ..." The announcer paused there, and I still didn't think much of it. It's probably Tom Papa, I thought, Seinfeld's regular opener, who is a very fine stand-up but undoubtedly gets called a "very special guest" mostly out of politeness. But the announcer's pause continued, and I wondered if he might say "Paul Simon," as there was a guitar mic onstage and I have to assume Seinfeld is friends with Simon, you know, just from being famous guys — hell, Tom Hanks was in the audience. Then he said it: "Mr. Steve Martin." I lost all of my shit. I screamed a scream I was familiar with, as it's the sort of scream I've heard at comedy shows for years when some celebrity — be it Chris Rock, Dave Chappelle, or Louis C.K. — drops in on a show unannounced; however, this time it was coming from my mouth. This was a very special guest.

In 1981, Steve Martin was the biggest stand-up in the country. He was arguably the biggest stand-up ever up until that point, regularly selling out amphitheaters when other top names were still playing clubs. And then he just stopped. He played a show and, after the show, decided not to do stand-up anymore. "My act was conceptual. Once the concept was stated, and everybody understood it, it was done," Martin wrote in his classic 2007 memoir Born Standing Up. "It was about coming to the end of the road. There was no way to live on in that persona. I had to take that fabulous luck of not being remembered as that, exclusively. You know, I didn't announce that I was stopping. I just stopped." It would be like if, 25 years from now, you realized that Kevin Hart's last tour — the one that sold out basketball arenas across the country — was really the last tour. It's the story of legends, one frequently discussed among comedians. He just stopped.

Until last night. There was a banjo onstage, which I didn't notice at first, but Martin didn't walk over to it right away. He walked up to the mic stand and took the mic off. He didn't put the stand behind him, however, as veteran comics do, to signify, I'm not going anywhere. Martin wanted the crutch; he wanted the out. "Thank you. Jerry couldn't make it tonight ... Have a safe ride home!" which is a solid enough opener, a thing he cares a lot about. "Actually, I'm here tonight because of that old showbiz saying: Never lose a bet to Jerry," he continued, referring to his episode as a guest on Seinfeld's web series Comedians in Cars Getting Coffee. Though there wasn't technically a bet made during the episode, rewatching it now, the whole thing feels like Seinfeld making a sales pitch for Martin to try stand-up again. See, not only does Steve Martin not perform stand-up, besides the memoir, Steve Martin doesn't even talk about stand-up, at least publicly. There was the 2010 92Y debacle, in which he was so intent to only talk about art that a 92Y staff member brought a note to the interview — mid-show — asking for them to "discuss Steve's career." I can confirm, from personal experience, that he doesn't want to be interviewed about it. But Seinfeld is different — he's also a legend; he's also a stand-up — and he got Martin to talk about that time at length. In the episode, Martin does seem a bit tense at first — likely because the conversation is being filmed — but slowly he loosens, joking around and even talking about ideas he has for jokes. Based on what Seinfeld said later at the Beacon, it seems like Seinfeld used this as an opportunity to get Martin back.

So, how was he? It's always hard to tell with celebrity drop-ins, because the audience gives them a pass for the first few minutes, laughing at everything in a way that is more like friends at a dinner party than an audience who paid to be there, and Martin only did a few minutes, but, looking back at the jokes themselves, I'd say he was mostly pretty good, occasionally almost great, and for one moment truly special. "I'll be honest with you, right off the top, because I'm a little upset with the Beacon Theatre," one joke began. "I was backstage and I used the restroom. And there was a sign that read, 'Employees Must Wash hands.'" Pause. "And I could not find [pause] one employee [pause] to wash my hands." Man, is that a classic Steve Martin joke. Reading it back, it might read overly jokey or cheesy, but that's the point. Martin in his prime did comedy that made fun of comedy. He told jokes that were unfunny, but he knew they were unfunny, and the audience knew he knew, and that's what made them funny. The difference is that last night, he didn't have the same schlock-y, showbiz-caricature persona he made famous in the '70s — he didn't do some dumb dance afterward — but you could still see the intention. And his specific, off-kilter rhythm was there (which is why I transcribed the pauses), where he hides the punch line so the audience isn't just being told when to laugh, allowing them to surprise themselves with when they laugh. A technique he pushed further with his next joke, the aforementioned special moment.

Here is the joke in full, as I was able to write it down:

By the way, I apologize for the ticket prices. [Pause.] I know it seems expensive, because there is like one guy, two guys, and a couple of mics, but it's not that way. There are like four sound people, and two lighting people, and [pause] drivers, and wardrobe people, and catering, and someone to walk Jerry's Fitbit around. [Pause.] A celebrity look-alike, in case Steve doesn't feel like going on. Steve says hi, by the way.

I've seen a lot of live comedy. I've seen all the celebrity drop-ins I mentioned above. Hell, I saw Jerry Seinfeld destroy about five minutes later. But this was easily one of the most exhilarating moments I've ever had as a comedy audience member. This was the Steve Martin whose albums I've listened to my whole life, whose copy of an old set list I bought on eBay and hung on my wall, who shaped modern comedy. The faux-entertainer shtick was clearly articulated, as Martin was using the sort of Hollywood, very fake, apologetic tone. And the use of rhythm was masterful. The joke, which gets lost a bit when typed out, builds by not building. The biggest laugh, arguably, came around the "and" in "and drivers." It's so classic Steve Martin, I found it hard to think of an analogue in music. By their nature, musicians play their old songs, which is supposed to remind you exactly of when they were great but doesn't really. Watching Steve Martin tell that joke was like if, in the middle of a modern-day Bob Dylan set of gurgles and growls, he brought out a time machine, turned the dial to 1965, and had young Bob Dylan come out to sing "It's All Over Now, Baby Blue."

After the show, my friend doubted whether this counted as a return to stand-up. Martin told jokes that he has probably been telling for years in between songs with his bluegrass band. And she was likely right about the jokes — especially considering he performed half the set sitting down with his banjo — but it was not the same thing. Steve Martin hasn't performed stand-up in roughly 35 years — he hasn't not been funny; he hasn't not stood up and told jokes, say, at Saturday Night Live or some awards show — he hasn't gotten onstage in front of an audience explicitly expecting stand-up and performed stand-up. Sure, you have to imagine any Steve Martin bluegrass audience is expecting jokes, but they also are mostly anticipating bluegrass. Last night, there were no expectations once he grabbed the microphone, and in that way, he was just like every other stand-up comedian performing in the city at the same time. The difference is maybe imperceptible to us, but it definitely wasn't to Steve Martin.

Midway through Martin's little banjo medley, Seinfeld came onstage with a banjo case and jokingly made a face that said, "Okay, wrap it up." So he did. And Martin got up from his stool, walked over to Seinfeld, shook his hand in the perfunctory way comedians shake the hand of the comedian who's up next at the mic, and said, "Thank you." Later in the show, before going into a question-and-answer encore, Seinfeld asked the audience to give one more hand to Steve Martin. "That is really the thrill of my career," Seinfeld added. Same.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #40 posted 02/19/16 8:15pm

purplethunder3
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JoeBala said:

Thanks PT! Who is performing?

biggrin biggrin biggrin cool

People who worked with Bowie! biggrin

Tony Visconti's Holy Holy Concert Becomes Strange, Mad Celebration After David Bowie's Death

David Bowie tribute band, Holy Holy, plays first of two shows in Toronto at the Opera House in Toronto. Jan. 12, 2016.
STEVE RUSSELL/TORONTO STAR VIA GETTY IMAGES

There was a strange, mad celebration in Toronto Tuesday night (Jan. 12) for music chameleon David Bowie, whose death Sunday after battling cancer has shocked and saddened the world.

Although it had been booked at Toronto's Opera House since December, Tuesday's Holy Holy concert took on new meaning since the passing of the ever-evolving, boundary-kicking artist. Holy Holy -- a band formed by Bowie’s longtime producer Tony Visconti and his one-time drummer Mick (Woody) Woodmansey, named after an obscure 1971 Bowie single -- was originally brought together to play 1970's The Man Who Sold The World front to back (something Bowie never did), in addition to performing classics from Bowie's Ziggy era.

David Bowie Dies at Age 69 After Battling Cancer

Minutes before the sold-out set started, Visconti came out to talk, among 900-some friends.

“Thank you for coming out in the cold,” he said on stage. “Listen, yesterday was the worst, well, almost the worst day in my life and I think it was for most of you here, too. We actually had to talk about whether we were going to perform more on this tour, but there’s no better way to work through grief except through music.

”Music is magic. It's better than any pill you can take. It's better than any drug and this music is some of the best music that’s ever been written. I’m so glad to see you are so upbeat. I didn’t want to see a sea of sad faces," he said, the crowd yelling "no" in approval. "I’ll tell you, David wouldn’t like that either. We have David’s total approval on this tour. He saw the videos; he heard the music; and he’s so happy you’re doing this and I want you to know too, so we’re going to celebrate the life of David Bowie.”

Woody then stepped up and added, “We really appreciate it. It’s good for us, as well as you. I know we all feel the same in this room, so as Tony just said it’s a celebration of David and his music. So you’re supposed to have a good time tonight. So that’s a fucking order, alright?”

The next two hours did seem to provide comfort for everyone. It meant something to be in a room full of people appreciating the legacy of one untouchable artist, particularly for Visconti, who appeared tearful at times. The band -- rounded out by frontman Glenn Gregory (of Heaven 17), guitarists James Stevenson (Gene Loves Jezebel, Gen X), Paul Cuddeford, sax player Terry Edwards, keyboardist Bernice Scott, and Visconti’s daughter Jessica Morgan on backing vocals -- kicked right into The Man Who Sold The World from lead track “The Width of a Circle,” then “All The Madmen, “Black Country Rock,” “After All” and “Running Gun Blues.”

David Bowie Heading for First No. 1 Album in U.S. on Billboard 200 Chart With 'Blackstar'

At the end of “Savior Machine,” Gregory hugged Visconti. It was a genuine blink-of-an-eye gesture before the band fiercely attacked “She Shook Me Cold." Holy Holy is not a tribute band, but a group of world-class musicians, two of whom played on the original studio recording. They continued with “The Man Who Sold The World” and “The Supermen,” and just as the song wound up -- the final song on that album -- Visconti said “one more time” and Gregory sang the final lyrics again, which took on a whole new meaning this night:

“Far out in the red sky / Far out from the sad eyes / Strange, mad celebration / So softly a super-god dies.”

The audience erupted in cheers. Visconti, calling it a celebration, folded his arms across his chest, fists closed. “The reason why we’re doing this is about 46 years ago Woody and I were the original musicians who played this album, so technically we’re not a tribute band; we are the real deal.

“And well, we couldn’t have done this without two people and the first one I’m going to mention is the fabulous guitar player that changed our lives, Mick Ronson and we couldn’t have done it without David Bowie."

In a touching moment, he stretched both arms out to the sky, held them there, then gave a kiss, clasping his hands back in front of him. By now we are all familiar with the opening lines of Bowie’s “Lazarus” -- “look up here, I’m in heaven.”

David Bowie's Final Album 'Blackstar' & 'Lazarus' Video Were Goodbye Notes

Visconti then quickly moved the show into part two. “We're going to do some songs I know you’ll sing along,” he said

Gregory -- who did justice to the songs and even possesses a tinge of Bowie’s style vocally -- got up from his spot on the drum riser. It was his turn to say a few words. “This was a very emotional night this was. We debated whether to carry on with this and Tony and Woody spoke and decided to carry on with the tour and I’m really glad we did. Seeing you all tonight we know we’ve done the right thing.”

The next part of the show began with “Five Years,” “Soul Love,” “Moonage Daydream,” and a medley of “Wild Eyed Boy From Freecloud,” “All The Young Dudes” and “Oh! You Pretty Things” that included “Changes.” When it was time for the next song, Visconti said, “This is always going to be one that’s difficult for me because it’s one of my favorite Bowie tracks. So I don’t know if I’m going to get through this completely in one piece, but ‘Life on Mars.’”

He made it through.

Next, a powerful “Ziggy Stardust,” and a couple of those lyrics had poignant meaning, too: “Became the special man/then we were Ziggy’s band" was fitting since Visconti and Woody were Ziggy’s band. “Rock and Roll Suicide” also got twisted to provide comfort: “oh no love, you’re not alone,” and in this room of 900 people celebrating Bowie, we did not feel alone in our grief.

The night also included “Lady Stardust” (sung by Visconti’s daughter) and “Watch That Man.” For the encore, two songs: “Time” with its lines “perhaps you’re smiling now/smiling through this darkness” and “Suffragette City.” People threw red roses. Gregory and Visconti each picked one up.

Woody then came out from behind the kit and thanked everyone for coming. “I can tell by your faces that you had a good time because we did completely. That’s what Bowie would have wanted.”

Iman, Bowie’s widow, recently wrote on her Instagram, “Sometimes you will never know the true value of a moment until it becomes a memory.” Anyone at the Opera House for this special tribute knows of what she speaks.

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

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #41 posted 02/19/16 8:20pm

JoeBala

cool cool cool

Kacey Musgraves Finally Figured Out the One Thing Missing From Gnarls Barkley’s ‘Crazy’: Lots of Fiddle

By

Anytime time Kacey Musgraves hits the stage, you're in for a treat. On her latest tour, she's been pulling out a cover of Gnarls Barkley's still-perfect "Crazy," and recently, while on the Cayamo cruise, she tweaked it even more. Her version already added all kinds of twang to the song — which itself was inspired by spaghetti Western soundtracks — but, thanks to some assistance from Nickel Creek's Sara Watkins, it now has lots and lots of fiddle. Kacey opens slow and steady, practically turning it into a melodramatic ballad, until that fiddle (and the rest of her band) gets going. Then we've got ourselves a party. Does that make Musgraves crazy? Probably.

  • Posted 2/16/16 at 10:35 PM
  • The Industry

Original “Good Times” Cast Hits Kickstarter to Raise $1M For Full Length Reunion Movie


Earlier this month, the original cast of the hit 1970s series Good Times launched a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter to raise a whopping $1 million so that they can create a full-length reunion movie.

Good Times 2

The show, which aired from February 1974 to August 1979, was a spin-off of Maude,the spin-off of All in the Family. The synopsis reads:

“A poor Afro-American family make the best of things in the Chicago housing projects.”

Sharing details about the project, the cast (consisting of Esther Rolle, John Amos, Jimmie Walker, Ja’net Du Bois, Bern Nadette Stanis and Ralph Carter) shared:

“From the day we walked off the set of Good Times, forty years ago, all we have heard is When are you going to have a Good Times reunion? Our audience have told us they need completion. They tell us we are not finished with the first Black T.V. family show. What happened? We want to see our favorite family show back on T.V.

“Well, here it is a chance to make that happen. We as a cast have always said maybe one day, we will have a reunion. That one day is here now. It is not just up to us, it is up to our millions of fans who have the power to make it happen.

Good Times 5“During these forty years as a cast we have been giving a numerous amount of scripts that were written about what happened to the Evans’ family. The ideas are countless, but as a group we have made a decision on where each character should go and what this long awaited script should be about. We are bursting at the seems to bring this exciting movie to you. All that we can tell you at this point is that it will be exactly what you expect from us and more.

“I am sure you will agree that the ones who can tell the stories of each character are those who have lived with those characters for forty years. That would be each one of us in the cast. Therefore in this movie we will have great input into what our characters will be about now. The success of kick-starter will give us as a cast control of what this movie will be about. Therefore bringing great satisfaction to our audience and to us as a cast who wants to bring nothing but the best to you.

“We as the cast have decided to go on the Kick-starter website because we had heard this would be excellent in making the dream of a Good Times Movie Re-Union happen. We checked it out, studied the success of some of our favorite artists who have decided to bring their projects right here on kick-starter and have been very successful in seeing their projects become a reality through the help of their fabulous fans. This is exactly what we want our fans and Good Time lovers to do for our project. Support us in making this movie happen. You will become an active part of bringing this generational movie to the big screen.

They continued:

Good Times 4“Let all of those wonderful memories, those back in the day memories, come back to you with a brand new flare. You know the ones when you watched the show with your mom and dad and grandparents. Sitting in the living room watching that one television set, on CBS one of three stations back then. Well I hope its bringing a smile to your face because its bringing a smile to mine. Those were truly fond memories that we will never forget as we pass the tradition on of watching the show with our children and grandchildren.

“Good Times has become a family staple in many American homes. The Evans Family was an African American family placed in the Cabrini Green projects in Chicago. It’s been playing on television somewhere in the world for 37 consecutive years. Proving that GoodTimes is not just anAfrican American show, it is an American iconic show that all people have come to love. It has found its place not only in television history but in the hearts of people all over the world.

“The Good Time Family as we call ourselves, want to thank each and every one of our fans for the love and support all of you have shown us throughout these forty most wonderful years that we have known each other.”

Good Times 6

Those that back the project will receive various perks, including t-shirts, photos, official movie poster, DVDs, and tickets to the movie’s premiere. Despite its rocky start of only retaining $5,000 so far, the Good Times cast assures fans that no matter what this movie is happening:

“Only an act of God could stop this movie from happening. Its going to be DYN-O-MITE!!!!”

The campaign is set to close at the end of the month.


  • Posted 2/18/16 at 5:42 PM
  • Feminism

Emma Watson Is Taking a Year Off From Acting to Get More Woke

Colonia Dignidad - Es gibt kein zurueck' Berlin Premiere

You won't be seeing Emma Watson at the movie theater in the foreseeable future, unless that movie theater also doubles as a feminist-book store and women's performance space. As Watson tells bell hooks in the new issue of Paper, she's taking a break from acting and devoting this year to becoming a better intersectional feminist. "My own personal task is to read a book a week, and also to read a book a month as part of my book club," she says. "I'm doing a huge amount of reading and study just on my own. I almost thought about going and doing a year of gender studies, then I realized that I was learning so much by being on the ground and just speaking with people and doing my reading." (Plus, her mother told her, "It feels like you'd be trying to prove to everyone that you're smart and trying to prove something by doing that.")

Hooks agrees that some celebrity activism can ring false to many people, and Watson adds that she wants "to do a lot of listening" during her time off: "I do feel like I have to overcompensate at times." Still, the actress says, it's a magical time for her. "It almost feels like the chemistry and the structure of my brain is changing so rapidly sometimes," she explains. "It feels as if sometimes I'm struggling to keep up with myself. It's a really cool period of time for me." Conscientiam Leviosa!

IN

CONVERSATION

WITH

BELL

HOOKS

AND

EMMA

WATSON

In our 'Girl Crush' series, women with mutual admiration for one another get together for conversations that offer illuminating looks into what it's like to be a woman right now.

When we look back at this moment as a period in time when women started talking about feminism and identifying as feminists with a passion not seen for many years, some of the high watermarks in this fourth-wave resurgence will be Beyoncé's 2014 VMAs performance, Malala Yousafzai's Nobel Peace Prize acceptance and, of course, Emma Watson's stirring speech at the United Nations. Emma's moving words and her work promoting gender equality through the UN's HeForShe movement provided the first real introduction to the concept for many young women (and men). For her part, the actress says she's identified as a feminist since she was a kid, but she also credits writer, artist, intellectual, and feminist icon bell hooks, author of Feminism is for Everybody among many other key texts, with inspiring her and helping shape her understanding and beliefs through her essays, books, and videos. And as for bell she says she is equally as inspired by Emma.

bell hooks: Ms. Emma Watson, you are my latest girl crush.

Emma Watson: Aww, bell. Well, you've been my girl crush for a little while now.

hooks: Oh, yeah? How did I come to be your girl crush?

Watson: I came to you through my friend Lilah. The minute that I got the UN position, the first thing Lilah did was to send me one of your books. And then as I was doing my own research, I found the videos of you speaking at The New School. And I was like, "Who is this woman? She's so funny." I loved your attitude so much. Everything you said just seemed to be coming from such an honest place. It was a pleasure to listen to you speak. I got hooked. I started watching video after video after video after video. Then I met with Laverne Cox, and we talked about you. I had watched you in conversation with her. It was Laverne who said, "Listen, you have to meet her in person. She's wonderful." So I read your work and then we met. That's been my journey, really.

hooks: That's so funny because I came to you through your work as well, watching you as an actress in the Harry Potter movies. As a cultural critic who writes about women and representation, I was fascinated by the character of Hermione. It was both exciting and at times infuriating to watch the way the character of Hermione developed and to see this vibrant image of a girl who was just so intelligent, who is such a thinker, then to also witness that that intelligence was placed in the service of boy power. Even so, it remains an important representation for girls.

Watson: I think it is. She's important because she -- well, certainly when I was reading Harry Potter, I started reading Harry Potter when I was 8 -- I just really identified with her. I was the girl in school whose hand shot up to answer the questions. I was really eager to learn in an uncool way. In a super uncool way, actually. And then the character of Hermione gave me permission to be who I was.

hooks: Did playing Hermione inspire you to want to be more intelligent? How did the parallel growth of the character of Hermione and your own self take shape as you moved towards I'm going to college, I'm doing certain things?

Watson: It was really interesting because at first, despite the obvious similarities, I guess I was also trying to detach my sense of self from the image. It was such a delicate time -- I was 10 or 11 when the first movie came out -- I was trying to figure out what my own identity was, but I didn't really have one yet. And I watch interviews that I did when the first movie came out and I was so lost! [Laughs] I would think, "What do young girls talk about? What do they say?" "I like going shopping and I have a crush on Brad Pitt." And I had no idea who Brad Pitt really was! I hadn't seen a single movie that Brad Pitt had been in, but this just seemed like the right thing to say. It makes me sad because I see this girl trying so much to fit in. The truth was I loved school. [Laughs]

hooks: All females living in the modern culture go through this transitional phase of sort of trying on acceptable images of femininity.

Watson: At first I was really trying to say, "I'm not like Hermione. I'm into fashion and I'm much cooler than she is," and then I came to a place of acceptance. Actually, we do have a lot in common. There are obviously differences, but there are a lot of ways that I'm very similar. And I stopped fighting that!

hooks: I was often annoyed with the development of the movie character of Hermione. By the time of the last movie, she's like a suburban housewife.

Watson: [Laughs.] Well, she goes on to have a career. And she does go on to do good and interesting things.

hooks: It's interesting that in the final scenes at the train station Hermione is such a passive image.

Watson: I've not thought about that.

hooks: I was like, "why is she looking frumpy?" and I wondered whose idea is this. Is this how the smart girl progresses? She moves from being intriguing to being the boring spinster? Movies are still struggling with how to create images of smart, vibrant, powerful, and intelligent older females.

Watson: Honestly, just from a practical perspective and not from an intentional perspective, we had such a hard time figuring out how to authentically age us -- to take us from where we were -- we were all 20-year-olds, and to make us look like we're in our 30s and 40s… we had a really hard time figuring out how to do that. We really struggled.

hooks: Well, I think that's that whole question of how do we become women of power and at the same time be able to project that we are attractive, cool, desirable. I'm thinking of Amy Schumer's "Last Fuckable Day" -- have you seen that?

Watson: [Laughs] Of course.

hooks: And I've thought about how that video annoys me because in the end they seemed to be acting like it's OK, it's just another transition. When I thought, gee, if they had just taken a minute, that it's really exciting that we can move on to being our real selves. And with images to celebrate that aging allows [women] to move from object to subject that are more real to who we are in this stage of our life. It would have taken just sixty seconds, or at least two minutes, just to celebrate being real, but rather than what -- to me -- would have had the flavor of a really interesting critique, they end up being like, "it's OK now." Rather than saying, "let's proclaim the best is yet to be here, honey. Not because we can chug melted ice cream but because it's a wonderful stage in life." As an older woman, over the age of sixty, it's an interesting, exciting time. Many of those struggles that we're talking about with identity happen when we are younger. That change happens through the aging process -- you realize that you don't want to stay in this character that you were. For me, it's so much the character of talking about race and/or feminism. And yet there are just a lot more things that interest and excite me. I look at how to bring that whole self out. I'm interested in fashion, too. I'm particularly interested in fashions that are comfortable and beautiful. I have an overall obsession in my life with beauty. I'm always wanting to surround myself with the kind of beauty that uplifts you, that runs counter to some of the stereotypes of feminist women.

Watson: Yes, yes. In Feminism is for Everybody, I found a reminder of just what you were saying, "To critique sexist images without offering alternatives is an incomplete intervention. Critique in and of itself does not lead to change."

Emma Watson and bell hooks share a selfie

hooks: I was thinking about what you were saying earlier -- that I am funny. A lot of people think I am, but most people don't. [Laughs] I was telling you that when we first met. That's a pretty big stereotype about feminists, that we're not fun, that we don't have a sense of humor and that everything is so serious and politically correct. Humor is essential to working with difficult subjects: race, gender, class, sexuality. If you can't laugh at yourself and be with others in laughter, you really cannot create meaningful social change.

Watson: I agree. The more you know, sometimes it makes it harder to speak out. You want to include so much and you want to be aware of so many things. That's why I'm impressed. You know your topic so well that you're able to be free with it and you're able to make jokes and you're able to be so confident within that. I think that's what's so great about hearing you talk. You have that ability.

hooks: Then, of course, when I'm improvising, I make mistakes. Like when I was talking about the trafficking in girls and the sort of worship girls have for someone like Beyoncé, I was really talking -- not about the person Beyoncé -- but of her image as being that of a kind of a terrorist. That just blew up in my face because people took the comment out of context. I want to know how you're dealing with how your words are heard and used, Emma? For both of us, albeit in our different levels of celebrity, fame, we have to be constantly watching all the time what we are saying and how it will be received.

Watson: Yeah, I feel I have to be quite vigilant. It's made me sad at times. I feel that fear of am I'm looking at this from all of the angles, how can this be interpreted, how can it be taken out of context?But I do have a lot to learn and I should be wary. But I agree with you. I think that it's really difficult to communicate through the media and through that medium sometimes.

hooks: It's definitely challenging. I, unlike you, have not been so engaged with social media. The New School conversations catapulted me into social media in a way. It was both on one hand exciting but on the other hand you're more subject to people misinterpreting what you say. And that was something that I had to accept. In a way, especially for females, too, you have to get over any kind of attachment to perfectionism. Or to being liked by everybody all the time, or understood by everybody all the time. It's just like when the Beyoncé comment was all over everywhere, and then Janet Mock posted this video where I was dancing to "Drunk in Love," and I was criticized for being hypocritical. To me, that wasn't a contradiction, because I wasn't talking about her music. We live in a world where most people don't think in complex ways, and it's very easy for there to be miscommunications and misunderstandings. Speaking of misunderstandings, let's talk about the word feminism. When does that come into Emma Watson's life?

Watson: It's in my life every day. I find that all the time when I engage with people for whom feminism might not come into their world or their consciousness but it has come in through my UN speech, or I'll be wearing a HeForShe band or whatever else and there is such an overwhelming amount of misconception around the idea. My UN speech was received really well, but by the people that it's critiqued by, they said it's so basic. It doesn't go into the important things. I don't know if it's really understood how much misunderstanding and how little understanding there is around this word -- and around these ideas -- still for a huge amount of people.

hooks: When did you first come to use the term feminism?

Watson: When I was 9, I think, during my first-ever Harry Potter conference, I said I was a "bit of a feminist"! Ha! I think I was scared to go the full hog. I was scared I didn't understand what it meant. I obviously did, I was just so bemused by all the chatter around the idea.

hooks: Emma, you are such a perfect ambassador. You have such a global presence. When you are speaking out to a global audience, you have to start where that world is. That means, at times, starting with things that are basic. That's how I perceived your UN speech. This is a shout out to females and males all over the world. It's like when you go to a foreign country and you're trying to communicate, we often use more simple ways of saying something, of bridging that gap of language and culture. So tell me more about your campaign, HeForShe, and what you are hoping to do with your ambassador position in 2016?

Watson: In Feminism is for Everybody, you write about the ways that feminism almost got hijacked a little bit by academics and by gender studies and by only being talked about by this specific group of people. It can and should be academic, and that kind of thinking is so important, but you talk about how it has to be a mass movement to make a big difference. I don't want to preach to the choir. I want to try to talk to people who might not encounter feminism and talk to them about feminism. It's a really interesting job, and it's a really interesting line to tread. I want to engage in the topic with people who wouldn't normally.

hooks: That's how I felt when I wrote Feminism is for Everybody. I wanted to write this easy-to-read book, a simple book. I knew that there were people who would say: This isn't very theoretical, intellectual. But that wasn't its purpose for me. Its purpose was to break things down. Students would say, "When I go home, I try to tell my parents about what I'm learning in Women's Studies, but they don't seem to get it." And I thought, I'm going to write this little book that you can give to people that will be that introduction into feminist thinking.

Watson: I just started a book club.

hooks: Yes, Our Shared Shelf --

Watson: I'm reading so much and exposing myself to so many new ideas. It almost feels like the chemistry and the structure of my brain is changing so rapidly sometimes. It feels as if sometimes I'm struggling to keep up with myself. It's a really cool period of time for me. My work that I do for the UN is all very clearly outlined, but my personal views and opinions are still being defined, really. So it'll be an interesting time.

hooks: As part of your efforts for activism and for self-growth, you're taking a year away from acting. That's a big decision.

Watson: I'm taking a year away from acting to focus on two things, really. My own personal development is one. I know that you read a book a day. My own personal task is to read a book a week, and also to read a book a month as part of my book club. I'm doing a huge amount of reading and study just on my own. I almost thought about going and doing a year of gender studies, then I realized that I was learning so much by being on the ground and just speaking with people and doing my reading. That I was learning so much on my own. I actually wanted to keep on the path that I'm on. I'm reading a lot this year, and I want to do a lot of listening.

hooks: You're kind of homeschooling yourself. The good thing is that studying in a more institutionalized way -- you're not foreclosing that. You have time. And now, you can reach out to people like Gloria Steinem and bell hooks.

Watson: It's been amazing. I've been doing a lot of that. I want to listen to as many different women in the world as I can. That's something that I've been doing on my own, through the UN, the HeForShe campaign, and my work generally. This January, our HeForShe IMPACT champions are ten CEOs who for the first time will be releasing to the media what their companies look like internally. So how many CEOs are male or female, the gender wage gap. We'll be making all of these statements completely transparent, which is huge. It's never been done before. So big companies like Vodafone, Unilever and Tupperware will be standing up to the media and really acknowledging the issues within their own companies and talking about how they are planning to address these issues as HeForShe IMPACT champions. I'm very interested and excited to see how that works out. I'll also take another field trip in the next two or three months. We are organizing a HeForShe arts week, a university tour, and launching the HeForShe website. It's a lot. There's a lot to do.

hooks: Well, it certainly sounds like a lot. So as I'm hearing this, I'm wondering -- when are you going to have any downtime, any fun?

Watson: Yeah. [Laughs].

hooks: Sometimes it's hard to recruit people to forms of activism for justice and ending domination because they think that there won't be any time left for fun. Everyone needs to have a balanced life. Being balanced is crucial, because it helps us not to over-extend or to try to live up to other people's expectations in ways that leave you feeling empty. There are people who are very cynical about celebrity activism. As a consequence, it may lead celebrities to feel like they've got to do more to prove they are genuine.

Watson: When I was talking to my mom about going and doing the gender studies, she was like, "it feels like you'd be trying to prove to everyone that you're smart and trying to prove something by doing that. You're learning so much on your own at the moment and enjoying it so much. You can prove that you care about it by spending time listening and talking to as many people as you can and keep doing what you're doing." I do feel like I have to overcompensate at times.

hooks: One aspect of what you are talking about that's so great is just being open and open to learning. A lot of times we know that in the world of celebrity activism, celebrities jump into a cause, but rarely are they telling us, "I'm studying, learning, I'm taking it slow, talking to people." It's so exciting that you're doing that. You're really sincerely struggling with what is needed to create a world without patriarchal domination. Thinking about the issue of female power, if you could give females, women, one thing in this world towards this vision of female liberation and power, what would it be?

Watson: I'm on my journey with this and it might change, but I can tell you that what is really liberating and empowering me through being involved in feminism is that for me the biggest liberation has been that so much of the self-critiquing is gone. So much energy and time -- even in subtle ways -- I'm 25 now and I've certainly come a long way from where I was in my early 20s. Engaging with feminism, there is this kind of bubble now that goes off in my head where these really negative thoughts about myself hit where I'm able to combat them in a very rational and quick way. I can see it now in a way that's different. I guess if I could give women anything through feminism -- or you're asking about power -- it would just be, to be able to move away, to move through all of that. I see so many women struggling with issues of self-esteem. They know and they hear it and they read it in magazines and books all the time that self-love is really important, but it's really hard to actually do --

hooks: I was thinking that the two things that I think are so vital for women globally are self-love and literacy. Growing up in a fundamentalist Christian home with very narrow beliefs about gender -- initially, my eyes were opened by reading.

Watson: Those would be my exact two as well. My understanding that has allowed me to feel so much more accepting and loving of myself as a woman -- it came through reading.

hooks: Often people in the West forget that masses -- millions and millions of women and girls in the world -- don't have access to education and are not taught to read and write.

Watson: That's right.

hooks: And for me, reading and studying is one of my deepest passions in life. It's like breathing. That's what I'd like to share. I felt from the moment I met you -- in terms of how a girl crush forms, it's one of the ways our spirits resonate -- that we think and dream about similar passions, and that's exciting. In many ways, we live in very racially segregated societies. There are so many types of people, and racially we don't cross boundaries. The New School talks were exciting because mostly I was able to choose people like Laverne Cox to talk with. Then bringing Laverne to my really small town in Kentucky to inaugurate the bell hooks Institute -- that was so exciting. I feel like part of creating a world that is just and diverse is pushing against those boundaries that close us off from one another. I'm glad that I'm not closed off from you, and that we're going to have more fun conversations in the days ahead.

Watson: Yes, absolutely. I wanted to ask you -- just coming back to what are you going to do for fun -- one thing that I am going to do that I've been working on for a while is completing my yoga Level 3 for meditation teaching. I noticed that in All About Love you have a quote by Jack Kornfield, who I read when I was really getting into meditation, and I was wondering, was that in a book that you had read?

hooks: Exactly, that's just what we were saying. Sometimes I think, is there anything that I come to that I don't come to first in a book? It makes me laugh.

Splash photos:

Photo of bell hooks by Liza Matthews

Photo of Emma Watson by Carter Bowman, styling by Sarah Slutsky, makeup by Charlotte Hayward. Emma wears a vest by Mango and a ring by Jennifer Fisher


  • Posted 2/18/16 at 5:08 PM
  • The Industry

Mad Max’s Abbey Lee May Join Dark Tower Adaptation, Which Is Just One More Sign It Might Actually Somehow Happen, Someday

Calvin Klein Collection - Front Row - Fall 2016 New York Fashion Week

A typical elephant gestation lasts 22 months, but that's nothing compared to how long it's taking the planned adaptation of Stephen King's The Dark Tower series — a mammoth undertaking comprised of multiple feature films and a tie-in TV show airing between them — to see the light of day. The project was announced in 2010, left for dead, then revived by Sony last spring; now, casting reports are swirling, which would seem to indicate the movie is not just a vision we encountered from the Wizard Glass. The latest, fromDeadline, is that Australian model/actress Abbey Lee is in talks to play Tirana, a minor character from the books who is apparently the female lead in the first film. (It's also possible her name has been changed.) Lee would join Idris Elba and Matthew McConaughey, who King says will "more likely than not" play Roland the gunslinger and the Man in Black, respectively. The first Dark Tower film is slated for release next January, so to see if this is legit we'll all only have to hold our breath for 11 more months. That's only half of an elephant gestation!

Here’s Zayn Malik Making His Solo TV Debut, Singing ‘It's You’

By


With the help of the Roots and a new song, Zayn made his TV debut as a solo act late Wednesday night. The former One Direction member introduced Tonight Show viewers to "It's You," which People notesconcerns his ex-fiancée Perrie Edwards. "I won't / Cover the scar / I'll let it be / So my silence, so my silence won't / Be mistaken for believing," he croons. "Am I wrong for wanting us to make it? / Tell me your lies / Because I just can't face it." Roll the clip above for Zayn's poignant, ethereal second single, as well as a clearer indication of his new sonic direction.

Oh, and enjoy the very adorable, very inky Mind of Mine cover:

Which should have you saying either Aww, or, Why, till the album comes out on March 25.

On Fallon: http://www.vulture.com/2016/02/zayn-tv-solo-debut-its-you.html

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[Edited 2/19/16 20:27pm]

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #42 posted 02/19/16 8:23pm

JoeBala

purplethunder3121 said:

JoeBala said:

Thanks PT! Who is performing?

biggrin biggrin biggrin cool

People who worked with Bowie! biggrin

Tony Visconti's Holy Holy Concert Becomes Strange, Mad Celebration After David Bowie's Death

David Bowie tribute band, Holy Holy, plays first of two shows in Toronto at the Opera House in Toronto. Jan. 12, 2016.

Thanks PT awesome! cool cool cool I hope it's televised.

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #43 posted 02/19/16 9:23pm

purplethunder3
121

avatar

JoeBala said:

purplethunder3121 said:

People who worked with Bowie! biggrin

Tony Visconti's Holy Holy Concert Becomes Strange, Mad Celebration After David Bowie's Death

David Bowie tribute band, Holy Holy, plays first of two shows in Toronto at the Opera House in Toronto. Jan. 12, 2016.

Thanks PT awesome! cool cool cool I hope it's televised.

I doubt it, but check on Ticketmaster to see if they are coming to a venue near you. I already bought tickets. This will finally be a fitting memorial for one of my music heroes. wink

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

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #44 posted 02/20/16 6:37am

JoeBala

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #45 posted 02/20/16 6:44am

JoeBala

From left: Cuba Gooding Jr., Jennifer Lopez, Taraji P. Henson and Aziz Ansari.CreditFrom left: Ray Mickshaw/FX, Peter Kramer/NBC, Chuck Hodes/Fox, KC Bailey/Netflix

“Ladies and gentlemen, welcome to diverse TV.” So said Idris Elba at the Screen Actors Guild Awards last month. It was a reference, of course, to the furor over the Oscars’ all-white acting nominees. But Mr. Elba, who won awards that night for film and TV performances, was probably also aware that in the debate over whose stories get told on the screen, it’s the small one that seems to have the edge as the more inclusive medium.

At least that’s what detractors of the Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences have been saying, and in the time since ABC made headlines by programming a slate of comedies (including “black-ish” and “Fresh Off the Boat”) created by and focusing on people of color, the television landscape certainly seems more diverse. But is that true, both in front of and behind the camera? Have more nonwhite actors and creators led to better television? Wesley Morris, a critic at large for The New York Times, and the chief television critic James Poniewozik take a closer look at shows like “The People v. O.J. Simpson” and “Master of None” to better understand what “diverse TV” really means.

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Courtney B. Vance as Johnnie Cochran in “The People v. O.J. Simpson.” CreditFX Networks

JAMES PONIEWOZIK In FX’s “The People v. O.J. Simpson,” Johnnie Cochran (Courtney B. Vance), the lawyer whose keen feel for racial fault lines will help get Mr. Simpson acquitted of murder, talks about a wrongful-death suit he pursued against the police. Sometimes, he says, “money is the only way to get justice.”

It’s an ironic line, because we know Mr. Simpson will later lose a wrongful-death case against him. But it’s true, and — in a mini-series that exemplifies how essential race has become to some of today’s best television — it speaks a truth about how and why the medium has gotten better about race. Representing more people in more ways is the right thing to do, and it has made TV better. But it happened largely because there was money in it.

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Mindy Kaling in “The Mindy Project.” CreditJordin Althaus/NBC)

There have been protests over the whiteness of TV before, as there are over the Oscars today. In 1999, the N.A.A.C.P. threatened a network boycott. There was some recasting, some behind-the-scenes hiring, some progress. But by fall 2008, there again was not a single minority lead in a new major network show. As Viola Davis said last year, “You cannot win an Emmy for roles that are simply not there.”

But she said that while collecting an Emmy. What’s happened, in the years of “Empire” and “Jane the Virgin” and “black-ish” and “The Mindy Project,” is a change of both business and culture. TV audiences for everything are smaller now, which means networks aren’t programming each show for an imagined audience of tens of millions of white people. On top of that, there are younger viewers for whom diversity — racial, religious, sexual — is their world. That audience wants authenticity; advertisers want that audience.

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Viola Davis accepting her Emmy for “How to Get Away With Murder” in September.CreditKevin Winter/Getty Images

That’s a practical explanation. I also believe there’s an aesthetic one: Diversity is another way of saying specificity, and specificity is just more entertaining. The less homogeneous TV is, the less boring it is.

WESLEY MORRIS TV is certainly less boring at the moment, and some of that energy has to do with the sudden proliferation of shows dealing with race (it’s a thing!), and on networks as varied as ABC, FX and HBO. Two of those shows, tellingly, have “American Crime” in the title, getting at an idea that in talking about this stuff we’re also talking about an original sin specific to us.

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Tony Goldwyn and Kerry Washington in “Scandal.” CreditRon Tom/ABC

But let’s explore the upside of that news: TV has prioritized making itself look a little more like the country watching it — and for any number of reasons: money, channels unto eternity, because it’s the right thing to do. Do I want to see Kerry Washington at the movies? Who doesn’t? But all that the movies have wanted her to do is look hot. So thank you, television — and Shonda Rhimes — for putting her in the arms of a sexy white president, then pushing him away, then pulling him back in, then, well, you get it. “Scandal” walks right up to original sin and pours it a glass of carignan.

But the movies haven’t, to my eye, made so-called diversity a priority. And as our pal Manohla Dargis hasnoted, it’s pointless for us to keep getting bent out of shape one month of the year. Even when you have a spate of movies with people of color: What are they up to? Putting aside “Jefferson in Paris,” shtupping POTUS isn’t on the list. What’s great about TV right now is that there are so many shows with so many people doing so much that it feels kind of lawless. Specifically, there are more black, Latin and Asian women doing more interesting, different things on TV than in the whole history of movies.

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Niecy Nash in “Getting On.” CreditLacey Terrell/HBO

I’d like to focus on one, because just the thought of her moves me. It’s Niecy Nash, who played Didi on the dearly departed “Getting On” (HBO). This is a great office comedy set in a geriatric ward, and it’s full of inventive acting from all kinds of people. But, as a black woman playing a nurse, Ms. Nash has a familiar part that’s typically a background role. What this show does is find ways to shred that stock stereotype. In the first episode of the third season, Didi’s making the bed of a white female patient while complaining about the racial politics of “Imitation of Life.” Of Louise Beavers, she observes, “She was the greatest colored actress of her day, and all she wants to do is be this white woman’s maid — and for no money.” I’d say that that wasn’t all Beavers wanted to do, but the sentiment resonates, anyway. And the casual way she does this all the while fanning sheets is poignantly funny. The show knows the limited historical terrain for a black actress and lays carpet atop it for Ms. Nash to walk. That feels like TV’s relationship to the movies with regard to race right now: You can do this, too.

When people react to these exclusion conversations, you’d think the argument was for confiscation. This isn’t about less “white” TV, but about putting on other kinds of people than there have previously been. No one wants to take away anybody’s “The Affair” or “Bachelor in Paradise.” It’s just exciting to watch television in a time when a show will encourage Niecy Nash and Kerry Washington to look at America’s past and roll their eyes.

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Aziz Ansari in “Master of None.” CreditK.C. Bailey/Netflix

PONIEWOZIK Too often the talk about inclusion frames it as reparations, a charitable act, a sacrifice. No one’s giving Ms. Washington or Ms. Nash anything by casting them on TV. We’re all getting something! We get to watch actors do great work, and we get TV that does what we want art to do: Show us something we haven’t seen before.

Take Aziz Ansari’s “Master of None” on Netflix. It’s familiar stuff on the surface: a New York City relationship comedy. What makes it special is how it’s personal to its star: his gourmandism, his observations about social media and his Indian-American identity. Sometimes race comes to the fore — as in the episode “Indians on TV,” which critiques the idea that “there can only be one” character of a given minority background on a show. Sometimes it’s just part of the ambient environment. (When Mr. Ansari’s character, Dev, runs into an ex who’s gotten married to a man she says is from Connecticut, he passive-aggressively compliments her new “white” family; turns out her husband is black.)

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Vincent Rodriguez III and Rachel Bloom in “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend.”CreditGreg Gayne/CW

“Master of None” isn’t about being Asian; it’s about being Dev. His identity is part of him, like the characters in “Friday Night Lights” being specifically Texan. It makes them real people. And real people like shows about real people! Mr. Ansari made the great point on a recent episode of “The New Yorker Radio Hour” that it’s silly to assume white people can’t “identify” with an Asian character: “People watch animated movies about bugs and fish! They’re relating to those problems!”

Now, why isn’t Mr. Ansari playing that kind of lead in the movies? Why is Ms. Davis playing a complex, fearsome, sexual antiheroine only on TV? Why was CW, not the movies, the place where Rachel Bloom of “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” could write herself a role as an emphatically Jewish woman with a hunky Filipino brah as her love interest and a cast as polychromatic as California?

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From left, Tracee Ellis Ross, Jill Marie Jones, Golden Brooks and Persia White in “Girlfriends.” CreditRon Tom/UPN

As a television partisan, I’d like to say that the long-form medium has more room to complicate characters and build worlds. But look again at “People v. O.J. Simpson,” which lays out an empathetic antagonism between two black lawyers, Johnnie Cochran and Christopher Darden, and shows the push-pull of racial versus gender politics, all within a ridiculously entertaining courtroom thriller: That’s an Oscar-bait movie! (It was even developed by the writers of “The People vs. Larry Flynt.”) Different business and artistic dynamics notwithstanding, I can’t help feel that the movies are just leaving a lot on the table here, and TV is eating its lunch.

MORRIS Can we stay on “People v. O.J Simpson” for a moment? This is a rich landscape that really does have everything you could want from a television show: the right amount of gravitas and trashiness; aptly terrible acting (hi, person playing Kato Kaelin) and what, in Courtney B. Vance’s Johnnie Cochran, might be the performance of the year. He’s subtle and funny and humane and defiant and, impossibly enough under the circumstances, kind of sexy. It’s interesting to me that he’s playing a guy who awakens self-interested white men to the real problem of race while also crassly manipulating racism to tell a more panoramic story about America. That feels like a version of TV right now. There’s too much of it, sure. But there are so many of us. All you need to find a version of yourself — or your friends! — is a remote control and a streaming subscription. And given who we’re still not seeing enough of (Native Americans, gays, the working poor), there’s room to grow.

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Jennifer Lopez and Dayo Okeniyi in “Shades of Blue.”CreditPeter Kramer/NBC

Some of what we’re talking about is an end to tokenism, as Mr. Ansari noted. I remember as a teenager thinking that it was interesting that “Friends” had a white sextet. But making one of them not-white always seemed to risk introducing an inorganic realness the show was never meant to have. “Friends” was fine the way it was. It was also the product of the way television was at the time, when so-called black shows were on UPN and, for a minute, WB, implying that most of the rest of TV was white. The antidote to that problem wasn’t a black friend. It was “Girlfriends,” which began in 2000 and at the time was this oasis of bougie dramedy. Now, happily, it would just be another show on TV.

Obviously, so-called diversity isn’t about just having one Asian dude on a show. It’s about a kind of plurality. There are at least five shows on plain-old network television starring or co-starring Latinas doing satirical comedy, physical comedy, dramatic comedy and whatever Jennifer Lopez has herself doing on NBC’s “Shades of Blue.” Is she severely miscast as a stressed-out, double-agent detective? Of course. But this is still better than “The Boy Next Door,” her recent stab at mattering at the movies. Maybe she keeps trying to matter on TV. Her radiance and natural humanness have rarely been better used than on “American Idol,” and they’ll be sorely missed when “Idol” bites the dust this year.

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Terrence Howard and Taraji P. Henson in “Empire.”CreditChuck Hodes/FOX

What I like about “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend” and “Master of None,” Jim, is precisely what you point out, which is that there are both imaginative and organic ways to make TV look like parts of the country without “alienating” anybody. Despite our unofficially segregated schools and neighborhoods, I like shows that work to achieve integrated casts without making integration look like work. “The People v. O.J. Simpson” achieves that feat while also keeping the legacies of race and racism on the hook.

PONIEWOZIK I think we’re seeing the decline of the idea of “colorblindness” — art exists to help us see, after all — in favor of color awareness. Sometimes that means diversity across TV rather than within every show. The whiteness of “Girls” — those cliques exist — is less of a problem when you also have “Survivor’s Remorse” and “Being Mary Jane” and FX’s coming “Atlanta” with Donald Glover.

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Taylor Schilling and Uzo Aduba in “Orange Is the New Black.”CreditJessica Miglio/Netflix

One rare show that manages to be about both integration and segregation is “Orange Is the New Black.” It’s set in prison, where inmates self-sort by race, but also ally and clash across lines. It belly flops into waters other shows dab a toe in, because behind bars, the normal protocols for talking around race are suspended. Prison is truly where you stop being polite and start getting real.

Speaking of which: For all the heat they take, reality shows often did more than scripted shows of their time to cast broadly; in 1994 “The Real World” aired TV’s first same-sex commitment ceremony, between a black man and a Hispanic man; NBC was still four years away from “Will & Grace.” But the genre has had its own problems of stereotyping and casting: We’re still waiting for a black Bachelor or Bachelorette, but we’re getting one on Season 2 of “UnREAL.”

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From left, Brian J. Smith, Johanna Braddy, Yasmine Al Massri and Priyanka Chopra in “Quantico.” CreditGuy D'Alema/ABC

But tough-love time. Stipulating that TV is doing a lot well, there’s a lot it could do better. In 2014-15, according to the Directors Guild of America, 69 percent of TV episodes were directed by white men. And few drama creators at cable’s prestige networks — HBO, Showtime, FX, AMC, et al. — are minorities.

That last bit matters because those are the pantheon-makers; they create the molds that future Don Drapers are poured into. And that’s where it may take more than market pressures to change things. In brazenly commercial network TV, money talks, and “Scandal” begets “Quantico.” In awards-bait TV, it will also take powerful people deciding to do the right thing, like Ryan Murphy, who recently pledged to have women or minorities direct half of the episodes of his shows by the end of the year.

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Kevin Carroll and Regina King in “The Leftovers.” CreditVan Redin/HBO

But even in the empyrean reaches of premium cable, Shondaland has a voice. One of the best seasons in 2015 was HBO’s “The Leftovers,” whose co-creator Damon Lindelof added several black cast members, including a searing Regina King. In an interview with BuzzFeed, Mr. Lindelof said he’d noted how Ms. Rhimes made shows that were not entirely about race yet found organic ways to remind the audience, “But these are black people, just so you know.”

I love that we’re at a place where an esteemed white male creator talks about what he’s learned from an esteemed black female creator. I’d love to get to a place where a black female creator is making an HBO drama series herself.

MORRISThat’s funny, because I got a load of Ms. King’s cornrows on that show and thought, “Who in Jarden, Tex., is doing her hair?” That’s a detail six people would query. But it does get to an element of authenticity that Ms. Rhimes and her collaborators have mastered and that speaks to the value of having people of color at every stage of a production, beyond the writers’ room and directors. “The Leftovers” had a black woman, played by Amanda Warren, as mayor of the New York hamlet where the first season was set. How did she get there? Who voted for her? Did the other characters know she was black? Did she? That character landed in the canyon between what you observe, Jim, as colorblind casting and casting that’s color aware. People of color are aware of seeing themselves and can see when someone’s been blind to color.

But whether he thought he’d miscast Ms. Warren (whose acting wasn’t a problem), Mr. Lindelof kept going and hired Ms. King, who did some of her best acting on this show. He didn’t stop there, though. He hired a handful of other black actors to explore some weird, otherworldly, grisly stuff: Darius McCrary, as a fortune teller; the veteran Steven Williams as the hoodooing father-in-law of Ms. King’s character; and Kevin Carroll, as her husband.

With Mr. Carroll’s firefighter, the show was especially daring. Here was a black man prone to unexplained outbursts of violence that rhymed with the trauma of the show’s main protagonist, a white cop, played by Justin Theroux. These two were soul mates who didn’t understand that violence had cosmically drawn them to each other. Not everything Mr. Carroll was asked to do worked, not because he was black but because some of the character’s moves were false. But that’s entertainment.

I don’t want to credit Ms. Rhimes for Mr. Lindelof’s risk-taking — he was already a gambler. But I do think when it comes to freeing actors of color to be bad, her influence is inevitable. Before “Empire,” her shows were among TV’s most nuts. And they had black people and Latinos and gay men at peak sociopath. On that front, “Empire” has already shattered her monopoly. I don’t know whether she feels Cookie and company breathing down her neck, but I’ve noticed an uptick in the insanity in Shondaland.

I think people saw what Ms. Rhimes was getting away with and wanted to see whether they could, too. That, to me, has led to so many complicated depictions of, say, black men on television shows with integrated casts: on “The Knick” and “Jessica Jones” and “Fargo” and the underwhelming “Ballers” and “Brooklyn Nine-Nine” and “Hit the Floor” (Jim, are you watching this?) and all of those shows with “American” and “Crime” in the title. This goes to your plurality point: The more, the merrier — and less “problematic.” Popular culture has always struggled with how much its nonwhite protagonists can be anything other than saints. But television is comfortable at last with diversifying its galaxy of sinners.

NY Times
The duo Daryl Hall, left, and John Oates, right, will headline a performance on Friday at Madison Square Garden. CreditSteve C Mitchell/European Pressphoto Agency

★ ‘American Songbook With Rhiannon Giddens’ (Wednesday) “Tomorrow Is My Turn,” the debut solo album by this singer-instrumentalist of the traditional string band the Carolina Chocolate Drops, is a contemporary affair of warmth and class. Ms. Giddens seems to find fresh zeal while weaving playfully between electric guitars and country-infused percussion; her hearty, deeply emotive voice still earns its spotlight, gilded with soft touches by the producer T Bone Burnett. With Leyla McCalla and Bhi Bhiman. At 8:30 p.m., the Appel Room, Frederick P. Rose Hall, Jazz at Lincoln Center, 60th Street and Broadway, 212-721-6500, jazz.org. (Stacey Anderson)

★ Animal Collective (Tuesday and Wednesday) Influenced by more avant-garde groups, this Baltimore psychedelic rock outfit has furthered its evolution into wondrous electronic pop with slyly crisp melodic cores. Expectations are grand for “Painting With,” the group’s 10th album, out this Friday; the early single “FloriDada” nods to the convivial drum-circle euphorics of its earliest releases with playful percolations of surf-pop. With Ratking. At 7 p.m., Irving Plaza, 17 Irving Place, at 15th Street, Manhattan, 212-777-6800, irvingplaza.com. (Anderson)

Black Sabbath (Thursday) The bloom is off the rose for many fans of this heavy-metal dynasty, as the band’s original drummer, Bill Ward, remains excluded from its grand farewell world tour. In 2013, the group released “13,” the band’s first studio album to feature its former frontman Ozzy Osbourne since “Never Say Die” in 1978. But the devil is in the details: Mr. Ward was also absent from that album. (Also on Feb. 27.) At 7:30 p.m., Madison Square Garden, 866-858-0008,thegarden.com. (Anderson)

Rosanne Cash (Saturday) The eminently cool daughter of Johnny Cash is a skilled singer-songwriter in her own right; she also has over 20 singles that have reached the Top 40 country charts. For Ms. Cash’s latest album, “The River & the Thread,” which was released in 2014, she nudged some gospel and rock into her twangy formula. With Jeff Tweedy. At 8 p.m., Isaac Stern Auditorium, Carnegie Hall, 212-247-7800,carnegiehall.org. (Anderson)

Bebel Gilberto (Monday and Tuesday) Brazil’s bossa nova dynasty remains expertly guided: Ms. Gilberto, daughter of the vaunted singer and guitarist João Gilberto, is a fluid, euphoric singer. One of that country’s top-selling artists (with her latest album, “Tudo,” out in 2014), Ms. Gilberto possesses an innate gift for creating intimacy between herself and her wildly gyrating audience — especially when chanting bilingual, bohemian mantras of love over rustling percussion. Monday at 9:30 p.m., Tuesday at 7 p.m., Joe’s Pub, at the Public Theater, 425 Lafayette Street, at Astor Place, East Village, 212-967-7555,joespub.com; sold out. (Anderson)

Jackie Greene (Monday) This roots-rocker has more than a few country bona fides; he was the lead guitarist for the Black Crowes before that group dissolved last year, and he also occasionally paired up with the Grateful Dead member Phil Lesh for scrappy, sprawling jams. His solo fare — most recently the album “Back to Birth” — weds spiritual balladry with pop-rock undertones. At 8 p.m., City Winery, 155 Varick Street, near Spring Street, South Village, 212-608-0555, citywinery.com. Sold out, but a wait list is available online. (Anderson)

★ Daryl Hall and John Oates (Friday) Madison Square Garden gets a dose of liquescent Philly soul with the oft-parodied singing duo Hall & Oates, one of the dominant soft-pop acts of the late 1970s and early 1980s. Of course, to mock them, even however gently (as all from “Friends” to “Saturday Night Live” have done), misses the pair’s agenda entirely: to be wholly unironic romantics, prostrating themselves faithfully at the feet of all rich girls and man-eaters before them. With Mayer Hawthorne and Sharon Jones & the Dap Kings. At 7:30 p.m., 866-858-0008, thegarden.com. (Anderson)

★ Julia Holter (Tuesday) Baroque stoicism nudges up to lolling post-rock overtures in Ms. Holter’s intriguing, eerie fourth album, “Have You In My Wilderness,” released last year. Her shape-shifting vocals — deceptively optimistic overall, despite some dips into near-Gregorian moony nadirs — capture an easy intimacy and fitful mind. With Mary Lattimore. At 9 p.m., Bowery Ballroom, 6 Delancey Street, near the Bowery, Lower East Side, 800-745-3000, boweryballroom.com; sold out. (Anderson)

★ Seu Jorge (through Feb. 28) This much-imitated samba revivalist from Rio de Janeiro has worn many hats in his career — not least a red, pointed one as an actor in “The Life Aquatic With Steve Zissou,” and its soundtrack featured his Portuguese covers of David Bowie tracks. Mr. Jorge’s rock- and electro-imbued interpretations continue to introduce the genre to fresh audiences. He released the album “Músicas Para Churrasco, Vol. 2” last year. Friday through Sunday, Tuesday and Thursday through Feb. 28, at 8 and 10:30 p.m., Blue Note, 131 West Third Street, Greenwich Village, 212-475-8592, bluenote.net. (Anderson)

Ladysmith Black Mambazo (Friday) Twenty years after this male a cappella choral group’s extraordinary harmonies backed Paul Simon on “Graceland,” they remain globe-trotting ambassadors the culture and history of South Africa. The ensemble, now based near the South African city of Durban, also had an adamant fan in Nelson Mandela. The group’s most recent studio album, “Always With Us,” dropped in 2014. At 8 p.m., Town Hall, 123 West 43rd Street, Manhattan, 800-982-2787, the-townhall-nyc.org. (Anderson)

Madeon (D.J. Set) (Friday) A 21-year-old nü-disco producer from France, Madeon (whose real name is Hugo Pierre Leclercq) has shot to top stages in the electronic dance music world off the strength of his pop collaborations with Lady Gaga and Coldplay. His debut album, “Adventure,” released last spring, includes cameos from Passion Pit, Dan Smith of Bastille, Mark Foster of Foster the People and more. At 10 p.m., Output, 74 Wythe Avenue, Williamsburg, Brooklyn, outputclub.com. (Anderson)

★ Sinkane (D.J. Set) (Tuesdays and Fridays) The eclectic funk-jazz collagist Sinkane blends soulful falsetto harmonies with the kind of slippery, tinny electronic percolations that could soundtrack a Nintendo 64 game. Flamenco guitars straight from Ipanema only add to this British-Sudanese artist’s quirky hypnosis. Signed to the perennially hip DFA Records, this month he is maintaining two free weekly D.J. residencies in the city. (Through Feb. 26.) Tuesdays at 8 p.m., Ace Hotel, 20 West 29th Street, Manhattan, 212-679-2222, acehotel.com/newyork. Fridays at 10 p.m., Baby’s All Right, 146 Broadway, near Bedford Avenue, Williamsburg, Brooklyn,babysallright.com. (Anderson)

★ Tibet House Benefit Concert With Philip Glass and Iggy Pop (Monday) This annual multicultural gala for Tibet House US, an educational center commissioned by the Dalai Lama, has in past years included the Roots performing a scorching cover of Neil Young’s “Down by the River” and the Flaming Lips reaching for the cosmos alongside Philip Glass. At this year’s installment, Mr. Glass reprises his artistic direction for the performers Sharon Jones, Iggy Pop and FKA twigs, among others. At 7:30 p.m., Isaac Stern Auditorium, Carnegie Hall, 212-247-7800, carnegiehall.org. (Anderson)

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Reply #46 posted 02/20/16 7:44am

JoeBala

Premio Lo Nuestro 2016 Winners: Luis Coronel, Marc Anthony, Prince Royce Take Home Awards, Plus Ceremony's Highlights

premiolonuestro-marcanthony-luiscoronel
Univision tiró la casa por la ventana during the 28th ceremony of "Premio Lo Nuestro A La Música Latina." Twitter/PremioLoNuestro/MarcAnthony

Miami was the place to be on Thursday night! Some of the hottest stars in the Latino music industry walked the 2016 Premio Lo Nuestro’s magenta carpet and we loved every second of it! Raúl De Molina, Chiquinquirá Delgado, Tony Dandrades and William Valdés were some of the hosts in charge of giving presenters, nominees, and guest celebrities a warm welcome before the real party began.

Once inside the American Airlines Arena, hosts Galilea Montijo and Arath De La Torre took over the stage and graciously entertained attendees throughout the rest of the night. This year, the viewing audience was treated to some of the biggest surprises we’ve seen during the award season. As we say in Mexico, Univision ahora sí se puso guapo!

Among some of the best moments of the night were, the opening number with Pitbull, Farruko, Joe Perry and Robin Thicke combining two musical cultures on stage. Thalía and Maluma performing their catchy new single “Desde Esa Noche.” Prince Royce’s return to his bachata roots with “Culpa Al Corazón.”

As the night went on, the amazing display of Latino talent just kept getting better and better with Carlos Vives’ performance, who was joined by Juanes, Fonseca, Silvestre, Jorge Celedon,ChocQuibTown, Maluma, J Balvin, and some of the most recognized soccer players on stage before accepting his award. Also among our favorite moments of the night were Sin Bandera’s reunion and Paquita La Del Barrio’s special tribute presented by the one and only, Gloria Trevi, who also delighted the audience with her single “El Amor.”

The complete list Premio Lo Nuestro 2016 winners:

GENERAL CATEGORY

“Premio Lo Nuestro” Artist of the Year: J Balvin

Video of the Year: “La Mordidita” (Ricky Martin, featuring Yotuel)

Best New Artist: Javier Rosas

Album of the Year: “Hoy Más Fuerte” (Gerardo Ortiz)

Collaboration of the Year: “El Perdón” (Nicky Jam, featuring Enrique Iglesias)

POP CATEGORY

Pop Album of the Year: “A Quien Quiera Escuchar” (Ricky Martin)

Pop Song of the Year: “Disparo al Corazón” (Ricky Martin)

Female Pop Artist of the Year: Natalia Jiménez

Male Pop Artist of the Year: Enrique Iglesias

Pop Group/Duo of the Year: Jesse & Joy

TROPICAL CATEGORY

Tropical Album of the Year: “Soy El Mismo (Deluxe Edition)” (Prince Royce)

Tropical Song of the Year: “Soy El Mismo” (Prince Royce)

Male Tropical Artist of the Year: Marc Anthony

Female Tropical Artist of the Year: Leslie Grace

Tropical Group/Duo of the Year: Los Cadillacs

Tropical Artist of the Year: Marc Anthony

REGIONAL MEXICAN CATEGORY

Regional Mexican Album of the Year: “Quiero Ser Tu Dueño” (Luis Coronel)

Regional Mexican Song of the Year: “Y Así Fue” (Julión Álvarez)

Male Regional Mexican Artist of the Year: Luis Coronel

Female Regional Mexican Artist of the Year: Chiquis Rivera

Regional Mexican Banda Artist of the Year: Julión Álvarez y su Banda Norteña

Regional Mexican Group or Duo of the Year: Calibre 50

Regional Mexican Norteño Artist of the Year: Gerardo Ortiz

URBAN CATEGORY

Urban Album of the Year: “La Familia B Sides” (J Balvin)

Urban Song of the Year: “El Perdón” (Nicky Jam, featuring Enrique Iglesias)

Urban Artist of the Year: Nicky Jam

Demi Lovato, Usher & More to Celebrate Ray Charles at the White House

Usher, Demi Lovato, Yolanda Adams and The Band Perry are among the contemporary artists heading to the White House to celebrate the late Ray Charles.

The White House says Leon Bridges, Andra Day, Anthony Hamilton, Brittany Howard, Sam Moore and Jussie Smolletthave also been invited to Wednesday's taping of "Smithsonian Salutes Ray Charles: In Performance at the White House." The program is to be broadcast Friday on PBS stations nationwide.

It will be the 16th such program held under President Barack Obama.

Michelle Obama has planned a daytime workshop with some of the invited artists for more than 130 middle, high school and college students from around the country.

Charles, known for such hits as "Georgia on My Mind" and "Hit the Road Jack," died in June 2004.


What to watch on Saturday, February 20...



8pm, Discovery
MythBusters
“Rocketmen” sees Adam and Jamie testing the use of gummy bears as rocket fuel. Because as Isaac Newton once remarked, the only thing awesomer than explosions is candy-powered explosions.


9pm, Starz
Black Sails
Eleanor and Rogers are alerted to a new threat, Silver gives Flint a push in the face of certain death, and Teach lives up to his name as he shows Vance how to move forward.


10pm, Esquire
Beowulf
The gang encounters new hostilities while trying to seal a new treaty deal. Adding to their woes, a mysterious malady affects Thane Gorrik’s daughter, sending them on a treacherous quest to retrieve the cure from a Mudborn creature. So y’know, maybe don’t complain the next time you need the pharmacist to get your Sudafed from behind the counter.

What to watch on Sunday, February 21...


7:30pm, Fox
Bob’s Burgers
Bob slips on the sidewalk, and he needs to get litigious in order to pay for surgery. But his rehabilitation takes a twist thanks to the unorthodox methods of Jairo in “Sexy Dance Healing.” In other legal affairs, the kids found a fake law firm to hash out disputes.


8pm, ABC
The Wonderful World of Disney: Disneyland 60
A commemoration of the 60th anniversary of the Happiest Place on Earth, including tours of the park’s most famous attractions and performances by Elton John, Tori Kelly, Kermit the Frog, the Los Angeles Philharmonic Orchestra conducted by Gustavo Dudamel, and many more.


8pm, Fox
The Simpsons
After accidentally ruining a homeless woman’s cart, Bart lets her move into his closet in “Gal of Constant Sorrow.” Lisa soon discovers that the newest member of the household is a gifted folk singer, but also someone with violent and addictive demons. Kate McKinnon and Natalie Mainesguest star.


8pm, CBS
Madam Secretary
A shocking incident has Elizabeth and President Dalton scrambling to find out how it could have happened in “Right of the Boom.” She suspects Miss Scarlett was responsible and he’s convinced it was Mrs. Peacock, but I’ll bet a third, far more complicated answer emerges.


9pm, NBC
Must See TV: A Tribute to James Burrows
The legendary sitcom director is celebrated by the casts of Cheers, Friends, The Big Bang Theory, Taxi, Will & Grace, Frasier, and more of TV’s favorite comedy series. An installment of NBC’s upcoming Crowded will mark the 1,000 episode of television Burrows has directed in his 40-plus-year career.


SEASON 3 PREMIERE, 9pm, Hallmark
When Calls the Heart
Jack is taken aback when Liz becomes a homeowner in “Troubled Hearts.” Elsewhere, Abigail uncovers Gowen’s selfish scheme while Frank realizes he must own up to his past.


9pm, AMC
The Walking Dead
Good news, everyone! In “The Next World,” the gang has unearthed a treasure trove of supplies! Ehh whaaa? They have competition for the newfound goodies? And also there’s no such thing as good news in the zombiepocalypse? Bad news, everyone!


9pm, CBS
The Good Wife
In “Targets,” Alicia joins a secret attorney panel that’s advising the U.S. government on a hot-button case. It’s so secret, in fact, that some guys are now coming to “detain” you just for having read this logline. (TV.com regrets the error.) In other federal probes, Eli hires Elsbeth to learn why the FBI has set its sights on Peter.


9pm, Showtime
Shameless
Carl puts his personal touches on Chez Gallagher in “Pimp’s Paradise,” while Debbie returns after Erica and Tyler let her go.


9pm, PBS
Downton Abbey
Edith and Mary tangle with romantic quandaries while Molesley and Spratt explore career opportunities. Meanwhile, Mrs. Patmore experiences some trouble at her bed and breakfast, and Isobel lays down the law.


9pm, Fox
Family Guy
Mayor West raises Quahog’s drinking age to 50 in “Underage Peter,” making Brian—who’s legal in dog years—the only game in town, liquor-purchasing-wise.


SEASON 5 PREMIERE, 10pm, HBO
Girls
“Wedding Day” sends the gang to an upscale resort for Marnie’s nuptials, which the blushing bride is overseeing in especially Marniean fashion. But the litany of potential pitfalls includes lousy weather, Desi’s nerves, and tension between Adam and Hannah’s date Fran.


10pm, ABC
Journey to the Oscars
Ahead of the 88th Annual Academy Awards, Robin Roberts hosts a special spotlighting some of this year’s nominees, including Sylvester Stallone, Brie Larson, Bryan Cranston, Ridley Scott, and Matt Damon.


10pm, CBS
CSI: Cyber
“Fit-and-Run” finds the team using fitness tracker technology to solve the murder of a jogger. Pfft. In MY day, joggers’ murders were solved by interviewing people at different addresses accompanied by a chung-CHUNG sound, and then arresting the most famous Broadway veteran involved. But fine, use your fancy-schmancy gizmos, whippersnappers.


10pm, Showtime
Billions
In “The Deal,” Wendy orchestrates a deal that depends on Chuck and Axe sitting down together. The only detail left to hammer out is which of them gets to sing which part of “The Room Where It Happens.”


SEASON 1 FINALE, 10:15pm, PBS
Mercy Street
President Lincoln’s visit is the impetus for Reb intrigues in “The Diabolical Plot.” In other machinations, Dr. Foster learns of a scheme to undermine him at his patients’ expense, and Aurelia faces a life-changing choice.


SEASON 2 PREMIERE, 10:30pm, HBO
Togetherness
In “Hotels,” Alex greets surprise birthday visitors while shooting a movie in New Orleans. In less festive matters, Michelle fesses up to Tina and Brett vows to turn over a new leaf.


12am, Cartoon Network
The Venture Bros.
The Ventures fend off a supervillain attack in “Rapacity in Blue.” Can Doc’s latest invention come to the rescue, or will day-saving aid arrive from a different source?

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Reply #47 posted 02/20/16 8:49am

JoeBala

El DeBarge Tour Dates

SAT APRIL 16, 2016 - 8:00 PM

Upcoming Dates

DateVenueLocation

Apr 16

Resorts World Casino New York City

New York, NY

Tickets & More

May 13

Verizon Theatre at Grand Prairie

Grand Prairie, TX

Tickets & More

.

[Edited 2/20/16 8:52am]

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Reply #48 posted 02/20/16 9:14am

MickyDolenz

avatar

JoeBala said:

Original “Good Times” Cast Hits Kickstarter to Raise $1M For Full Length Reunion Movie

February 18, 2016 @ 12:39 pm By

Earlier this month, the original cast of the hit 1970s series Good Times launched a crowdfunding campaign on Kickstarter to raise a whopping $1 million so that they can create a full-length reunion movie.

Good Times 2

The show, which aired from February 1974 to August 1979, was a spin-off of Maude,the spin-off of All in the Family. The synopsis reads:

“A poor Afro-American family make the best of things in the Chicago housing projects.”

Sharing details about the project, the cast (consisting of Esther Rolle, John Amos, Jimmie Walker, Ja’net Du Bois, Bern Nadette Stanis and Ralph Carter) shared:

Good Times 6

Those that back the project will receive various perks, including t-shirts, photos, official movie poster, DVDs, and tickets to the movie’s premiere. Despite its rocky start of only retaining $5,000 so far, the Good Times cast assures fans that no matter what this movie is happening:

“Only an act of God could stop this movie from happening. Its going to be DYN-O-MITE!!!!”

The campaign is set to close at the end of the month.

I wonder what this movie could be about? On the last episode, JJ got a job as a comic book artist and the others were getting ready to move out of the apartment building, including Willona & Penny. James was dead on the show, so I don't guess John Amos is going to be in it. I'm not sure what Bookman's role could be if he's in it. It would be cool if Kim Fields & Janet Jackson could be in it, but that's doubtful.

You can take a black guy to Nashville from right out of the cotton fields with bib overalls, and they will call him R&B. You can take a white guy in a pin-stripe suit who’s never seen a cotton field, and they will call him country. ~ O. B. McClinton
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Reply #49 posted 02/20/16 9:57am

JoeBala

MickyDolenz said:

JoeBala said:

Original “Good Times” Cast Hits Kickstarter to Raise $1M For Full Length Reunion Movie

Good Times 2

I wonder what this movie could be about? On the last episode, JJ got a job as a comic book artist and the others were getting ready to move out of the apartment building, including Willona & Penny. James was dead on the show, so I don't guess John Amos is going to be in it. I'm not sure what Bookman's role could be if he's in it. It would be cool if Kim Fields & Janet Jackson could be in it, but that's doubtful.


I read it's mostly a documentary than a catchup.

The Original Good Times Cast Wants to Make a Movie, But They Also Want Your Kickstarter Help So They Can Make It Dyn-O-Mite

By
The 'Good Times' cast. Photo: CBS

The Good Times cast is so tired of people asking for an onscreen reunion they're finally just doing one themselves. The remaining core talent — John Amos, Jimmie Walker, Ja'net Du Bois, BernNadette Stanis, and Ralph Carter — will band back together in the form of a Kickstarter-funded revival project. (Nope, not this one. A whole other one.) Their film will be a docu-dramedy-comedy, according to the cast, that will catch up with the Evans family in the future, finally giving fans of the groundbreaking 1970s sitcom closure. "It will be exactly what you expect from us and more," reads a message on the page. "I am sure you will agree that the ones who can tell the stories of each character are those who have lived with those characters for forty years." Plot and logistical details haven't been announced yet, but Amos promises to bring back other celebs from the realms of sports and pop culture who also used to have a relationship with the original CBS show.

The crowdfunding campaign comes after 40 years of fan pleas for "completion," according to the cast, not to mention a recent stretch ofdevelopmental silence tied to studio-led efforts. A report from Deadline notes The Original Good Times Cast Movie is being done independent of Sony and primary producer Norman Lear, and is incorporating the time jump to avoid copyright infringement. The Kickstarter money will go to securing "the best technicians in every department that makes for a good movie," according to a promo vid. Backing rewards range from posters and digital downloads of the finished product, to cast-member voicemail greetings and the chance to be a walk-on extra. At time of publication, the page had racked up roughly $4,000, with 16 days left to hit its $1 million goal. (Fear not: A note at the bottom of their page assures, "Only an act of God could stop this movie from happening.")

For more info, check out the movie's site

Lauryn Hill Joins The Weeknd on Fallon for the Grammys Performance That Could Have Been

By

Lauryn Hill was set for a surprise performance of "In the Night" with The Weeknd at the Grammys earlier this week, which became less of a surprise when a photo of the two performing together leaked, and then not a performance at all when Hill showed up too late to take the stage.

Luckily, Jimmy Fallon, champion of reunions, spinner of dreams, brought Hill and The Weeknd back together on the Tonight Show last night to do that duet. The result is as astounding as you might expect, as Hill does vocal backflips around Abel Tesfaye's sustained melody. All is right with the world (except the results of the Grammys, but we will talk about that later).


Eddie Levert Interview – New Album, The O’Jays Legacy, Grammy Hall Of Fame Induction

YKIGS FEBRUARY 18, 2016 1

Eddie Levert 2016

What else needs to be said about Eddie Levert? The O’Jays‘ lead singer has been able to touch multiple generations with his music and his impact is still felt today. Just recently, The O’Jays‘ song “For the Love of Money” was inducted into the Grammy Hall Of Fame. The group started finding success back in 1972, but they’ve surprising never won a Grammy despite all their commercial success. Their much deserved induction into the Grammy Hall of Fame shouldn’t be a huge deal at this point, but it’s a massive achievement considering that “For the Love of Money” came out in 1974. Along with that, Eddie Levert is showing no signs of slowing down as he released his last album “I Still Have It” back in 2012 and he’s back again with the new album “Did I Make You Go Ooh”. YouKnowIGotSoul had to talk to the legend about being inducted into the Grammy Hall Of Fame and his feelings. We also talked about his new album and the challenges for him in today’s music industry.

YouKnowIGotSoul: Congratulations on being inducted into the Grammy Hall Of Fame for the song “For the Love of Money”. How does it feel right now?

Eddie Levert: You want the truth? The O’Jays have been nominated about 5 or 6 times and this is a terrible way to get into the Grammy’s. They nominate my song, but they don’t nominate me. I feel like “Wow, the song beat me out and now I can’t get in there!” Anyway, it was like I came through the backdoor to get there.

YouKnowIGotSoul: With the song itself, it’s 40 years old and it’s still being recognized today. That must be big for you right?

Eddie Levert: That’s the good thing about it. That’s the great part about it. The song has lasted that long and it’s still relevant now. They’re still associating this song to be a Grammy award winning song and that’s a tremendous thing. That’s a great achievement w within itself. That’s just saying a lot about the song and the lyrics that people can still relate to those lyrics 40 years later.

YouKnowIGotSoul: In today’s music industry, there’s such a division in listeners based on age. How were you guys able to capture everyone?

Eddie Levert: I think that’s what is so great about The O’Jays’ music. The songs are still associated with life. It’s everyday living and it’s still the same. Those songs like “The Love Train” and “For the Love of Money”, it’s still every day living. That’s why people are able to associate with it because it’s every day living. “For The Love of Money”, that’s still going on. You’ve got to give people what they want. This is what people live and that’s why we’re still so prevalent.

YouKnowIGotSoul: As an artist, you’ve had moments in the studio where you could recognize what was going to be a hit based on your own instincts. Did you know “For the Love of Money” was going to be special?

Eddie Levert: We knew it was special from the time that bass lick came on. It started out just being a bass lick and then it turned into a song. Then they wrote these great words about the love of money and people lying and cheating. Some people really need it and some people do really bad things with it.

YouKnowIGotSoul: I know you just put out a new song called “Did I Make You Go Ooh?” How did that single come about?

Eddie Levert: That’s a true studio song. We were sitting in the studio and Edwin Nicholas who wrote a lot of songs with Gerald Levert, he kept telling me I needed to do something sensual and a little bit sexual. He was like “You need to do that” and I was like “Well, play me something. Let’s see what you have”. He put the music down and I went home and I was like “How can I be suggestive but not be over the top?”. “Did I Make You Say Ooh?” is something that would let their imagination go wild.

YouKnowIGotSoul: Talk about your new album that you’re working on.

Eddie Levert: The title is called “Did I Make You Go Ooh” as well. I finished it and we just released it on the 29th of January. I’m out promoting it and out in the cold weather just running around to all the radio stations to get people to buy it.

YouKnowIGotSoul: What can we expect from this album? Your last album “I Still Have It” came out a few years ago. Should people be expecting the same type of sound?

Eddie Levert: It’s a little more. This is a little more in-depth than “I Still Have It”. The last album was a thing that I decided I would go in the studio and I would show the kids how an old vet like myself can go in the studio with songs and it would be a hit. I didn’t realize that the music business had changed a lot. Radio is not the same and it’s all social media. I thought what would happen is that people would say “It’s Eddie Levert and he’s a legend. We’re going to play him!” That was wrong. *Laughs* It didn’t happen like that. Plus we didn’t think we had to work hard at getting it played. We found out by making that mistake and we had to go back and do the work to make them play it. We had to go out to promote it and we had to go out and do radio. We had to get into social media to let people know that it’s there. Radio is not the same anymore. You have iHeartRadio, Sirius Channel and Radio One. They’re picking the people that they’re going to play on a regular basis and I’m not part of that crowd. My relevancy is in question. *Laughs*

YouKnowIGotSoul: At this point in your career, are you still looking to achieve commercial success?

Eddie Levert: Absolutely. I still want to prove to them and the world that I am viable.

YouKnowIGotSoul: Is there anything you would like to accomplish in your career still?

Eddie Levert: I would like to go and do movies. I want to produce other people besides myself. I have a granddaughter who is very talented. I have a grandson who thinks he’s talented. I would like to open doors for them and saying all of that, I want to be involved in their careers and getting them started. In doing that, I’ve started a website called EddieWLevert.com and I’ve put my music on iTunes, Google Play and Amazon music. I have to get involved. I have to know passwords to all of those. It’s terrible. *Laughs*

YouKnowIGotSoul: It’s awesome that you’re embracing technology and all the changes.

Eddie Levert: You have to if you still want to be a force in the music business. You have to be involved in social media.

YouKnowIGotSoul: Being that you’ve been able to see the evolution of R&B since The O’Jays, how do you view the state of R&B and was it tough for you to see the genre changing?

Eddie Levert: If you want to be in this business, you have to embrace the change. If you want to be in this business, you have to keep reaching and shifting. You have to be part of what today is. If you’re not part of that, they’re going to bypass you.

YouKnowIGotSoul: In terms of the artists today, is there an artist that stands out to you as someone who has impressed you with their stage presence? Touring and stage performances aren’t as big as they used to be.

Eddie Levert: I think they’re more involved with the smoke and mirror. When you had people like James Brown, it was all about James Brown. Now when you go on to see a show, there’s about 50 people out there and you don’t know who the star is. You don’t know who the guy is that you came to see unless they have the spotlight on them. You’ve got 20,000 dancers and you don’t know who you should be looking at. It’s about smoke and mirror. I’m still down for the minimum. If you go see Jackie Wilson, you went to see Jackie Wilson. If you wanted to see James Brown, you saw James Brown. I’m still from that school of thought and I’m still that way with my show. Not being selfish or greedy, i just feel like I should be the focal point of what people want to see.

YouKnowIGotSoul: You’re still touring and it has kept your music relevant throughout the years. Has touring been important to you?

Eddie Levert: Absolutely because we’ve been able to stand 4 generations. We’re not only getting people in my age group, but we’re also getting their children and their grandchildren. Now we’re getting kids who are 13 years old and they know who I am. It always blows me away. These kids just need to know who we are. I guess their parents and grandparents played their music so much that they can relate to it. This is the thing I try to convey to radio that people like us are still relevant because these people are hearing their music through their parents which makes me relevant. You should play my new stuff. They play the old stuff which I think is great, but we’re still artist. We’re still creating and we still have something to say. We still do good music and they should recognize that and give us some airplay.

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Reply #50 posted 02/20/16 10:58am

JoeBala

Sara Bareilles and "Waitress"

Sara Bareilles Putting "Puzzle Pieces" Together for Her Broadway Musical, "Waitress"

(NEW YORK) -- After a trial run in Cambridge, Massachusetts, last year, singer/songwriter Sara Bareilles' first musical, Waitress, starts previewsBroadway previews March 25. A giddy Sara has been posting pictures and videos of the theater marquee, and wrote that she's so happy that her "heart's exploding." Sara credits that out-of-town tryout for helping her and the rest of the team to "get all the puzzle pieces in the right place."

"For Broadway, I think we had this amazing gift of this incubation period up in Cambridge, so we got to see a lot of our own mistakes," Bareilles tells ABC Radio. "And with a new musical, you know, so many things are in flux and we're just trying to tell the most heartfelt, soulful story."

Waitress is based on the 2007 film of the same name, written and directed by Adrienne Shelley, who was murdered in 2006. It starred Keri Russell as a pregnant waitress in the South who's trapped in an abusive marriage, and whose only creative outlet is making pies.

"Now we get to really try to get all the puzzle pieces in the right place," Sara says of the work ahead of her to prepare for the Broadway debut. "To make sure that we're really honoring Adrienne Shelley's legacy and her vision for the movie and for this new iteration of it."

Bareilles wrote the music and lyrics for the production, and released her versions of the songs in November on the album What's Inside: Songs from Waitress. She says one thing she enjoys about being involved in the process is that for once, she gets to do something musical that doesn't involve her having to be in the spotlight.

"I loved the curtain call every night," she says of the Cambridge production. "I loved watching these actors take the stage and receive validation and adoration...and not have to be a part of it!"

Waitress stars Jessie Mueller, who won a Tony Award in 2014 for playing legendary singer/songwriter Carole King in the musical Beautiful: The Carole King Musical. Sara posted a photo of the musical's script on Monday and captioned it, "My view for the next 6 weeks," adding the hashtag "icantWAITress.

Copyright © 2016, ABC Radio. All rights reserved.

Creatives Dish on New Musical at BroadwayCon

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Sara Bareilles - What's Inside - Songs From Waitress

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Sara Bareilles and Sir Elton John - Gravity (Duet)

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Reply #51 posted 02/20/16 11:36am

JoeBala

Denzel Washington and I spending the eve of Sidney Poitier's birthday in his home. Laughter, wisdom, Bahamian food and pure soul. He is the very foundation that made it possible for us to stand. What a blessing. Happy birthday Mr. Poitier.

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Reply #52 posted 02/20/16 3:07pm

Identity


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Adele and Her Collaborators Are Raking in the Royalties
Feb 2016


By this point, it’s probably pretty obvious that it pays to work with Adele. But just how much does it pay? Billboard reports that the singer and her collaborators on 25 -- which included Bruno Mars, OneRepublic's Ryan Tedder and Mark Ronson -- have taken in an estimated $13 million in royalties so far.

According to Billboard’s breakdown, Adele, who co-wrote every track, has earned $3.8 million. Ryan, who worked on the song "Remedy," took in just over $532,000. Bruno co-wrote and produced the ballad “All I Ask,” and made approximately $211,000. And Mark, who produced the bonus track “Lay Me Down,” earned around $45,000.

But the writer-producer who scored the most royalties after Adele is super-producer Greg Kurstin, who worked on three songs for the album, including the smash hit “Hello.” He made $2.4 million.

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Reply #53 posted 02/20/16 3:47pm

purplethunder3
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Yoko Ono turned 83 today and celebrated with a new orchestral version of ‘Walking On Thin Ice’ with a potent video reflecting on the absence in her life since the death of John Lennon.

Yoko was 47 years old when John Lennon was murdered out the front of their New York home at The Dakota at 1 W 72nd St, New York. The original ‘Walking On Thin Ice’ was the last thing John and Yoko recorded. They had finished the song on December 8, 1980. Hours later John was dead.

The new version of ‘Walking On Thin Ice’ was produced by Danny Tenaglia who previously remixed Yoko Ono’s ‘Walking On Thin Ice’ in 2003 and 2013. Both remix packages went to #1 on the Billboard Hot Dance Club Play Chart.

For the new version “Danny created and delivered his “Walking On Thin Ice (Maestro Mix)” and it was an unexpected pleasure when Yoko received it – abandoning his usual dance style for a more poignant and elegant orchestral remix.

“Released on Yoko’s 83rd birthday, 18 Feb 2016, this new video contains original camera footage from the music video that Yoko directed herself in 1981 for the original version of ‘Walking On Thin Ice’, much of it previously unseen”.

The new version is on Yoko’s new album ‘Yes I’m A Witch Too’.


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

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #54 posted 02/20/16 3:51pm

purplethunder3
121

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Rihanna has postponed the start of her North American tour due to "production delays".

The Diamonds star was slated to kick off her Anti trek in San Diego, California on 26 February (16), but now that date, as well as her first eight stops throughout the U.S., have been shifted from February and March to May (16).

A representative for Rihanna tells The Los Angeles Times that "production delays" were the cause for the postponement.

The news comes days after she pulled out of a planned performance at Monday's (15Feb16) Grammy Awards at the last minute, citing vocal issues.

Nearly an hour and a half into the ceremony, Rihanna's spokesperson released a statement to Entertainment Weekly that read: "Based on Rihanna's examination after Grammy rehearsal today, Rihanna's doctor put her on vocal rest for 48 hours because she was at risk of hemorrhaging her vocal cords.

"The antibiotics she has been on for three days did not kill the infection adequately, therefore she cannot perform safely."

Insiders informed multiple news outlets she was planning to sing Kiss Me Better at the Grammys before cancelling her appearance. She wasn't the only singer who was a Grammys no-show this year, as Lauryn Hill unexpectedly pulled out of her performance with the Weeknd at the awards ceremony.

The Anti world tour, in support of her eighth studio album of the same name, is Rihanna's first solo trek since 2013. Her rumoured boyfriend, rapper Travis Scott, will serve as her opening act on the North American leg, while Big Sean and The Weeknd will join her for shows in Europe.

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

https://youtu.be/CVwv9LZMah0
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Reply #55 posted 02/20/16 5:26pm

KCOOLMUZIQ

JoeBala said:

NAACP Image Awards highlight the power of diversity

Taraji P. Henson
Scott Collins Contact Reporter

As Taraji P. Henson took home the prize for outstanding actress in a drama series at the NAACP Image Awards on Friday night, she left viewers and the audience with a little something as well: “We don’t have to ask for acceptance from anyone," the star of Fox's hit soap "Empire" told the crowd at the Pasadena Civic Auditorium.

"We are enough and we’ve always been enough."

Henson -- whose "Empire" husband, Terrence Howard, also won a top acting prize -- didn't have to spell out who she was referring to.

Red carpet report: Stars say why the NAACP Image Awards matter

The 47th Annual Image Awards ceremony, which honors people of color in the entertainment industry, arrives amid a widespread debate over diversity in this year's Academy Award nominations.

NAACP Image Awards 2016 | Show highlights

Director Spike Lee, who has said he will not attend the Feb. 28 Oscar telecast as part of a boycott to protest the lack of diversity in the major acting categories, was seen in a reaction shot as singer John Legend gave an impassioned speech about racism.

Friday's two-hour ceremony, telecast live on TV One, started off with a musical number. Host Anthony Anderson was costumed as 1990s-era Ice Cube and rapping as part of the group N.W.A.

"Don't call it a comeback," Anderson said after he shed the costume, paraphrasing another rapper, LL Cool J. "We've been here for years."

Later in the evening, Anderson won his second Image award as the patriarch in ABC's family sitcom "black-ish," and the show also took the top prize for comedy.

Tracee Ellis Ross -- daughter of Diana Ross -- took the comedy actress award for playing Anderson's wife on the series. "Empire" won for top drama.

NAACP Image Awards 2016 | Red carpet arrivals

"Straight Outta Compton" took the top prize for motion pictures, while Sanaa Lathan was picked as outstanding movie actress for her performance in "The Perfect Guy."

Perhaps the night's biggest winner was Michael B. Jordan, who won for his starring role in the boxing film "Creed" and also won as Entertainer of the Year.

Anderson gave a shout-out to Will Smith and his wife, Jada Pinkett Smith, joking that the pair -- who have also vowed to boycott the Oscars -- "better be here after all that 'ish' they started."

Stacey Dash -- a star of the film "Clueless" who has angered many with her views as a Fox News commentator -- earned a special jab. Anderson called her "Ann Coulter dipped in butterscotch."

Perhaps the strongest comments from the first half of the ceremony came from singer Legend, who called for "radical change" after winning the NAACP President's Award, presented by the civil rights group's leader, Cornell William Brooks.

"I accept this award with deep humility and gratitude," Legend said. He criticized "a criminal justice system that over-polices us" and lamented a world in which "the color of our skin conjures the image of threat and violence."

The current adversity offers an opportunity, Legend said. He added: "Let's not waste it."

I attended this show and it was beautiful! The diversity in the room was unmatched by any other award show.

eye will ALWAYS think of prince like a "ACT OF GOD"! N another realm. eye mean of all people who might of been aliens or angels.if found out that prince wasn't of this earth, eye would not have been that surprised. R.I.P. prince
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Reply #56 posted 02/21/16 7:21am

JoeBala

Thank PT & ID

KCOOLMUZIQ I bet you had a great time. cool

Rick & LL.

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Reply #57 posted 02/21/16 7:40am

Identity

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The Jacksons to Perform at Michigan Casino in May
Feb 2016
Link


The Jacksons have added a May 27 concert at the Four Winds Casino in New Buffalo, Michigan, to their 2016 U.S. tour schedule. The group, which currently features Tito, Jackie and Marlon Jackson, is celebrating its 50th anniversary of The Jackson 5 at its shows this year.

The Jacksons will be showcasing plenty of classic Jackson 5 hits during their performance, including "ABC," "I Want You Back," "I'll Be There" and "Shake Your Body (Down to the Ground)." The concert also will feature video footage and tributes to late Jackson 5 lead singer Michael Jackson.


Tickets for the show can be purchased @ 11 a.m. ET via Ticketmaster.com or by calling (800) 745-3000(800) 745-3000 FREE.

The Jacksons also have four other U.S. shows on their itinerary, according to TheJacksonsLive.com.

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Reply #58 posted 02/21/16 7:44am

JoeBala

No Jermaine? eek

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Reply #59 posted 02/21/16 8:05am

JoeBala

How Little Anthony Survived His Journey and Arrived at His Destiny

It’s difficult to pin down Anthony Gourdine. Best known as “Little Anthony,” the falsetto-voiced namesake of the ’50s R&B group the Imperials, Gourdine is also a card-carrying member of SAG and has traveled the world over performing for the past half century. His life, a bit precarious at times, is detailed in a new book, Little Anthony: My Journey, My Destiny, revealing much more than most people know besides Imperials hits like “Tears On My Pillow,” “Going Out of My Head,” and “I’m On the Outside Looking In.” In it, Gourdine is starkly honest, sometimes to the point of oversharing, about his struggles with drugs, depression, and women. He chronicles the darkest times, but also some of the happiest — of his childhood in Brooklyn, New York, and those initial golden days of stardom. For a man who’s seemingly done and seen it all, it’s amazing that he could fit his multitude of lifetimes into one single volume. Recently, REBEAT spoke to Gourdine from his home in Las Vegas about the book, the road, and setting the record straight.

REBEAT: Your book is more of a narrative — it’s not really first person — and I know you had a co-writer, but how did you make the decision to make it a third-person account?
LITTLE ANTHONY: I’m a book reader — I read a lot — and one of the things about autobiographies is that basically most of them are “me” books, all about me. I did this, I did that, I jumped through the hoops. I didn’t want that. I wanted the people [reading] to take a little imaginary trip, sort of go back in time with me, take this journey [with] this little black kid out of Brooklyn, New York, out of the projects and the ‘hood…I wanted to let people see where this thing went. And in the end, I had people say, “Oh, it’s a book of redemption;” yes, [it’s] that too. So it’s the beginning — it’s a history book, it’s a book of redemption.

Right in the foreword, you talk about your title, My Journey, My Destiny. When you started to put together this book, did it really drive home the concepts for you? Like, “Wow, I have been on a journey, this was my destiny.”
Yeah, if I were to put everything on that journey, it’d be a novel.

I’m sure it could be a four- or five-part series!
Yeah, part one, part two, and part three! I just tried to take certain areas of my life that I felt were pertinent, that I felt were relevant — I mean all of it’s relevant, but I just wanted to find something that maybe reached people’s hearts, or maybe their experiences, or maybe they didn’t experience it, and maybe they get a little inspiration about not giving up. Even in the book, it talks about when I wanted to commit suicide. The thing is, there are emotional roller coaster rides in my life. Real highs, real lows, in betweens, you know? And when I look back at it, these really are my memoirs.

[In] the second or third months, [the book’s writer, Arlene Krieger] started putting Kleenexes on the table because I would cry, she would cry. I tried to get her to understand as much as I can. I said, “Arlene, you’ve gotta put this thing down like I tell you, note-for-note.” When you’re talking to someone, you sit there, and you’re reflecting, you’re going back. And she told me, “I’ve done a lot of books but you have total recall.” I said, “What do you mean?” She said that a lot of people don’t know as much detail, [like] what somebody said to you.

I’ve talked to a few people right after their autobiographies came out, and they compare it to going to therapy because you sort of purge everything.
It’s very therapeutic because you revisit the fun things, but you [also] revisit the very painful things. Like I talked about burying my entire family over a 10-year period. I had to revisit the pain and the depression that I went through. I have a great respect and understanding of what depression is. I was there; it’s a very dark place. And you can’t do a thing about it! It’s like, why do I feel this way? Why do I feel so bad? Nothing makes you feel good. Even the food you eat doesn’t taste the same anymore. And you’re in a very dark place. So I was able to express that then show how I was delivered from that.

I was standing on Flatbush Avenue, Prospect Park area, and [a voice in my head] said “jump in front of a car.” And a kid hollered, “Oh, there’s Little Anthony!” And I snapped and I said, “Yeah, that’s who I am — I’m Anthony.” That one momentary time kept me from jumping because now I had something to focus on. Because depression takes you to a place where you’re nobody. You don’t have any hope, there’s no tomorrow. I understand why people do what they do. They get so low, they don’t see hope, but there’s always hope.

My best friend…was Frankie Lymon of Frankie Lymon and the Teenagers. Well, Frankie died — he took an overdose of heroin. The day before, he called me because he was coming to visit his home because he was in the Army, and he called me and said, “Meet me over at Roulette Records, we’ll have a beer together or something.” I was in Chicago, and when I got to New York City, my wife had that look on her face. She said, “I got something to tell you; it’s not good.” I said, “Oh gosh, what is it?” And she said, “He’s gone.” I said, “Who’s gone?” “Frankie’s gone, he’s dead.”

He tried to cover up his pain and his emotional misery with heroin — and it killed him. And I would say at least 75 to 80% of the people that I knew are not with us because they OD-ed or whatever it might have been. And, by the grace of God, I’m still here — faculties, mind, sound, voice, everything. Like, a lot of times, I’ll tell people… they’ll ask me, “Do you do something special for your voice?” I’ll say no, because I don’t smoke anymore. I do vocalize and take care of it, but it’s not my voice: it’s God’s voice. I just got it on loan, you know? So at 74 years old, I even wonder to myself, how the heck can I sing like that? But I do. And that’s supernatural as far as I’m concerned.

In the book, you talk, of course, about your career with the Imperials, but one important distinction you make is to strike down the term “doo-wop,” which many listeners would associate with your style of music.
I always knock down these myths. I tell people, there was no such thing as doo-wop; we’d never heard it. Doo-wop didn’t exist in our day. It was R&B. We were street-corner singers. That word came in 1973, and I did some research and found out it was Gus Gossert — a disc jockey, I think it was — who was trying to explain that era. But he was seeing it from the side of how the white groups sang as opposed to how the black groups sang. The black groups sang a lot of soul; the white groups couldn’t do it, so they developed their own sound. And obviously some of them, like the Duprees, the Elegants, all those groups out of New York, they used to make up their own sound; they didn’t know how to do it. So they would come up with things like “ba-ba-ba, ba-Barbara Ann,” you know, “doo-wok a doo-wok a doo-wok a doo-wok a,” see?

So this guy, he broadscoped us, he put us all in the same category. And I’m not against anybody wanting to be a doo-wopper, but that’s not who we are. We started out on the street singing. You can’t put “Going Out of My Head,” “Hurts So Bad,” “Take Me Back,” “I’m On the Outside Looking In” in that category.

I always say to people, when we were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame, we weren’t inducted as a doo-wop group! There was no category for doo-wop. You can look it up; there is none. So we’re in there because we’re a contemporary R&B group! So I just want to set the record straight. That’s why I wrote the book: I’m trying to tell people that your perception is not reality; that may be how we live and how we see, but I want you to get deep inside who I am, and then you’ll realize what I’m saying is accurate.


“Doo-wop” is, obviously, sort of a colloquial term now, and it’s not, like you said, super accurate for the time, but the interesting thing about the Imperials, I think, is that you started with one sound, then you left the group, came back, and it turned into this beautiful, lush, arranged production with “Hurts So Bad” and “Going Out of My Head.” Your sound certainly grew up in only about two years
We crossed that bridge, and many of the kids that came out of my era didn’t. The closest to me, to crossing that bridge, was Frankie Lymon with “Out In the Cold Again.” We were so hard to label; nobody knew what we were because we had so many different eras and different sounds. I had the era of the street-corner music, I had a song called “Shimmy Shimmy Ko-Ko-Bop” — how do you label that? That’s called a novelty song.

You can’t nail me down. That’s all I’m saying. You can’t do that because of the brilliance of the people that I worked with and the growth that we had. Maybe that’s why a lot of cats and ladies that I knew in that era are still stuck in that era. And I gotta tell you this, I’ve seen a lot of them so unhappy, it’s unbelievable. And they’ll say, “How do you do this?”

You’ve been on the road now for over 50 years; when you step onstage, does it ever feel like it’s been 50 years?
You know what? Inside of me is a 30-year-old kid. A 30-year-old kid in a 70-year-old body. I know I’m 74, because when I get up in the morning [my body] tells me I’m 74, but in me is this kid who still lives, trying to get out. He’s alive and well, and he wants to do things. So when I go onstage, my acting ability kicks in, and I can sing “Hurts So Bad.” It’s never the same way, only people would know, suddenly, I would change something because that when I feel it that time. So every time I go onstage, it’s actual fun. That’s not the same with a lot of my contemporaries; they’re like, miserable. It’s hard work because they’re stuck. They’re stuck and labeled and that label carries with them for the rest of their careers. So a lot of them are very unhappy. And they look at me and they admire me and the Imperials, what they did and who we are. It’s just amazing.

When people say “you’re this,” I go no, no, no, no, no! (laughs) No, I’m too complicated. You know what I mean? It’s easy to label — especially Americans, we have a tendency to pull down a beautiful work of art and make it a parking space if it makes money. You know, we like to label things we don’t understand. If we don’t have a name for it, we give it a name. You know the kids were doing, today’s music… I don’t know who gave it the name hip hop. I bet you if you asked them, they don’t know where it came from. That’s okay, it’s okay. It’s okay as long as that’s who you are. If you’re labeled properly, that’s beautiful. If you’re mislabeled, that’s not good.

One of the interesting term you use — because a lot of people have different ways of referring to artists of your generation, like “legacy acts” and even the dreaded “oldies band” — is a “survivor group,” which I thought was a really great way of putting it. It seems especially apt in your case.
Yeah, we were kids in Brooklyn — street kids — and we survived. Maybe that mentality stayed. We stayed together longer than just about any group in the history of that part. Up until 2003, we had all the Imperials, the actual original guys: Sammy, Ernest, Clarence, and myself. Sammy left in 2003, and then Clarence left in 2012. So now there’s really only one guy left from the original kids on the street, original kids, [and that’s] Ernest Wright. And he’s still with me. I do a lot of single shows; more and more, you’ll probably see me as a solo act more than anything else in the future. Because it’s not the same anymore. It’s just not the same anymore without Clarence and Sammy. You know what I’m saying?

Image result for Little Anthony: My Journey, My Destiny

Yeah, I’m sure. You expect to see certain faces with you and they’re not there, and it’s different.
One of things we stressed in the past was that we were the originals. About 90% of other people weren’t. So I sit there and I go, “My goodness, I’m still here.” You know, I oftentimes think of Ernest Hemingway. Hemingway wrote a book, For Whom the Bell Tolls, and he says, “For whom does the bell toll? The bell tolls for thee.” So that day will come when I’m not going to be here anymore. That’s how it goes.

I remember a story that George Burns said. He used to play canasta with his friends in the Hollywood days, the ’30s. I can’t remember all of them. And he said as the years went by, first there were seven, and then there were five, and then there were four, and then there were two, and then, he said, there was him. And you can’t play canasta by yourself.

I’m very blessed to be able to even write that book. I didn’t write that book to get a bestseller or anything — I wouldn’t go that far. But I did it, Arlene and I, because it was a chance to explain to everybody this journey that I’m still on. And the people that have impressed on me their wisdom, you know? A lot of people don’t get that opportunity, they just don’t. And I did.

So many people don’t write it down, and it’s a tragedy for writers like me and historians coming up; we want to know those stories. It’s such a joy to live through those experiences with you and with other people who’ve written their memoirs. It’s invaluable, really.
It is, it is. Hopefully I did that. I was saying to my team of people who work with me and help me with this journey, “This book is not a sprint, it’s a marathon.” [laughs] You know? It’s not going to break all the records in the world, but it should be out there for a while.

Maybe it could help some young artist coming after me who’s going through that — they’ll see, “Oh my goodness, he went through the same kind of changes I’m going through. He did it. How did he get out? Oh, that’s how he did it!” I hope that’s something that will help.

It’s the Same Old Song: 10 Records That Sound TOO Much Like That Artist’s Previous Hit

It’s great to have a hit record. Well, I assume it is, as I can’t say I’ve ever had one myself. I’ll further assume it’s great to have more than one hit record. But I’ll have to also assume that some bands tried a little too hard to have another hit — or maybe they didn’t try hard enough.

You’ll often find in the history of pop music that when a band or singer scored a hit record, either the artist or producer or manager decided the best way to keep the newly found momentum going was to release a follow-up that sounded a great deal like the hit. Heck, they figured, if the country bought their formula the first time, surely they’ll want another dose. Anyway, if the artist released something completely different it minimized the chances of their new fans recognizing them when the “new” song played on the radio.

While there is some logic to that, sometimes the resulting record didn’t fall too far from the tree. Sometimes it even sounded like it got stuck on a branch on the way down. Below are 10 records that stayed a little too close to the sound of a previous hit by that same artist, sometimes to the point of sounding like they stem from the same session minutes later.

(Regardless of the title of this article coming from a Four Tops song, I’ve completely left Motown off this list. They turned that practice into an art form, and I’m considering doing a follow-up list at some point strictly on Motown examples.)

1) “Lost In My World,” The Outsiders (Capitol, 1966)

We’ve all heard the Ohio pop combo’s 1966 classic “Time Won’t Let Me,” but have you heard their track “Lost In My World” from a few months later? Yes, you have even if you haven’t, because “Lost In My World” is little more than all the ingredients of “Time Won’t Let Me” reassembled with only the slightest different balance. Whether it’s the drum-fill intro, the key of A, double first verse with identical trumpets coming in on the second half of that verse, eighth-note drum beat on chorus that ends with solitary drum fill, similar guitar solo, and yes, the double-time vamp outro, if “Time Won’t Let Me” has it, you’re sure to hear it in “Lost In My World” as well. Even the vocal covers the same basic note range (both start on C#). Not even the lyrics were spared: “Time” begins with the words “I can’t wait” and “Lost” begins with “I waited.”

“Lost In My World” was released on a summer 1966 single, sharing vinyl with the group’s take on “Respectable,” the official A-side and the side that made the national Top 20, though “Lost” did get some play across the country as well.

2) “Why Do Kids Grow Up,” Randy & the Rainbows (Rust, 1963)

I don’t know about kids, but from the sound of this record, Randy & the Rainbows didn’t grow up at all musically between their spring 1963 Top Ten goldie “Denise” and this nearly identical follow-up which nationally only got to #97. Doo-wop fans love to place the blame on the Beatles and their sudden rise to fame in America wiping vocal groups off the map. Whether they did or didn’t whop the doo-woppers, the Beatles cannot be blamed for the failure of “Why Do Kids Grow Up,” which had already seen the sands of its chart life run out before anyone in America saw the invasion coming. A better culprit to blame would be the song sounding far too much like its predecessor for America to desire a copy. Similar key, melody, modulation in the same place; the only thing that wasn’t similar was the response.

In fairness, the lyrics were a little more sophisticated — at first. It is, in large part, a lyrical cousin of “Why Do Fools Fall in Love?” By song’s end, the previous record’s “I’m in love with you” has only progressed as far as “I’m so in love with you.” The writers apparently felt, with that line, that they truly needed to put in just one more reminder to everyone that this was the same group who sang “Denise.” But most people figured that out about two bars into this song.

3) “M’Lady,” Sly & the Family Stone (Epic, 1968)

The members of San Fran’s legendary psychedelic soul combo reportedly did not like their first big hit “Dance to the Music,” but it didn’t stop them from doing a virtual carbon copy of it a few months down the line. Perhaps it was an intentional put on; they had already released a strange “rethink” of the song on a bizarre single under the name the French Fries. But “M’Lady” was born of the same DNA as the big hit: same key, tempo, drumbeat, and fuzz bass line, same instrument by instrument buildup, same brief chordal diversion to D#, same breaks for a capella scatting. The group placed this on the flip of their 1968 single “Life” and also on the album named for that A-side.

“M’Lady” just made the American Top 100 and just missed the British Top 30. It was seen fit for inclusion on their 1970 Greatest Hits album, and was the opening number of the group’s legendary set at Woodstock in 1969.

4) “A Thousand Shadows,” The Seeds (GNP Crescendo, 1967)

If you only know one Seeds song, it’s “Pushin’ Too Hard.” No, let me amend that: if you only know one Seeds song, you actually pretty much automatically know a second. Their 1967 single “A Thousand Shadows,” though a fun listen, reeks a tiny bit of “Hey, remember us? We’re the guys who did ‘Pushin’ Too Hard.'”

“Pushin’ Too Hard,” their lone Top 40 release, is almost entirely B minor to A over and over. The only time in the entire song it deviates is at the end of the keyboard solo when for two bars it does a “You Really Got Me”-style riff in B minor. “A Thousand Shadows” is also almost entirely B minor to A, but to its credit it does have a little more deviation. First, it begins with a slow dramatic (well, at least Sky probably thought so) lead-in, before the band kicks in with their “Push”-alike. The melody is exactly the same as heard on “Pushin'” and the backing vocals are almost complete duplicates of those heard on the older song as well. (This is actually one of very few other Seeds songs with backing vocals, so it’s a pity that, in this rare instance Sky allowed for them, he made his bandmates sing pretty much the same thing as the last time.) The saving grace, and one of the few things that serves as a clue to a casual listener that he’s not listening to “Pushin’ Too Hard,” is the “Run little girl” section. In terms of chords and melody, it’s very well done. Unfortunately, it comes only once and a little too early in the song to balance things out.

5) “She Drives Me Out of My Mind,” The Swingin’ Medallions (Smash, 1966)

The group that gave us “Double Shot (Of My Baby’s Love),” or at least the group that gave us the version that sold (record buyers were seemingly on holiday when Dick Holler & the Holidays fired the first “Shot” in 1964), tried to give us a double shot of the same song. “She Drives Me Out of My Mind,” written by then 19-year-old future country star and latter-day Raiders guitarist Freddy Weller, follows the “Double Shot” blueprint quite closely. Both have party-vibe group vocals, both let the compact organ do most of the driving, both songs have the singer(s) describing his (their) love in terms of addiction, and both songs’ verses follow the same exact chord pattern: a bar apiece of A to F# minor to D to E.

Though the Swingin’ Medallions sing in both songs about how they just can’t enough, most record buyers had indeed already had enough, for “She Drives Me Out of My Mind” didn’t drive any further than #71, the last time the Medallions would swing on the national charts, suggesting buyers had had enough of not only the repeated formula but the band as well.

6) “Tear Drop City,” The Monkees (Colgems, 1969)

This is the only one on the list that wasn’t released relatively soon (as in, under a year) after the success of the song it recalls. Its story is a little different.

In 1966, the Monkees started their ride nicely with a pair of #1 singles. In 1967, they scored another #1 single and several that came very close. In 1968, after their TV show went off the air, they began to see their fortunes reverse, and in 1969 they never placed higher than #56 on the singles charts.

That lone Top 60 entry for the year came from one of the oldest tricks in the book about ways to revitalize a band’s chart life: do a revamp of one of your big hits that’ll draw ’em back. Well, doing a reconstruction of “Last Train to Clarksville” might have been a good idea, but the Monkees went one extra step: not only was their first 1969 single a song that sounded quite a bit like their 1966 debut single and first #1, it was even a 1966 recording. “Tear Drop City,” a Boyce-and-Hart composition and production, dated back to October 1966 sessions for the second Monkees album (and by the time the Monkees issued the song, Tommy and Bobby had already recorded and released their own version, probably thinking, “We may as well… nobody else is using it.”) In fact, it was just one of several Boyce-Hart written/produced “Clarksville” clones done that year. Another, “Tomorrow’s Gonna Be Another Day,” made it to the debut album, while “Apples, Peaches, Bananas, and Pears” ended up uneaten and unwanted on the floor alongside “Tear Drop City,” but, unlike the latter, would not get picked up for any Colgems release.

“Tear Drop City” was, like all of those songs, recorded in the key of G7 with a groovy, dirty guitar riff to lead the way courtesy of Louie Shelton’s Telecaster, and around the same tempo as well. By release, both key and tempo were slightly altered when the master was bumped up to A flat, but these masked the “Clarksville” foundation about as well as a mustache on the Mona Lisa.

7) “Black Veils of Melancholy,” Status Quo (Pye [UK], Cadet Concept [US], 1968)

The famed British combo’s first single (under their most well-known name) was the psych classic “Pictures of Matchstick Men,” which had the band psychin’ all over the world, landing in the Top Ten in several countries (peaking at lucky #7 in several) and falling just short of doing so in America, their only song to make the American Top 40 (and only one of two to make the Top 100.) The catchy ditty captures the future boogie band going through their psychedelic phase (shifter). When “Matchstick Men” set the charts on the fire, the question presented to them was how would they follow up a psychedelic key of D song that begins with and takes periodic breaks for a lead guitar line of unison guitar notes, wah-wah guitar, and has a G to A to D chorus with high bass guitar notes, lyrics about bizarre imagined pictures, and sections of D to F to C to G? They decided the answer was… with a psychedelic key of D song that begins with and takes periodic breaks for a lead guitar line of unison guitar notes, wah-wah guitar, and has a G to A to D chorus with high bass guitar notes, lyrics about bizarre imagined pictures, and sections of D to F to C to G.

Yes, Status Quo lived up to their name with their second single, “Black Veils of Melancholy,” perhaps the most blatant recycling job on this list.

How did record buyers take to this carbon copy? Well, let’s put it this way: “Pictures of Matchstick Men” was Status Quo’s first hit. “Black Veils of Melancholy” was not their second.

8) “Mirage,” Tommy James and the Shondells (Roulette, 1967)

“Here it comes again!”

“Hanky Panky,” in the summer of 1966, was Tommy James‘ first big hit, and at #1, it couldn’t have been much bigger. It took a couple of lesser, but admirably charting, singles before he and his band found their way back into the Top 10, but the fabulous “I Think We’re Alone Now,” their first single of 1967, rightly rerouted them there.

In an effort to move forward, James and his writer and producers moved backwards — literally. The story goes that writer Richie Cordell incorrectly threaded up a reel-to-reel tape of “I Think We’re Alone Now” resulting in the song playing backwards. Tommy, who was in the room at the time, liked the “found” hit and requested Cordell turn it into an actual song. The result was “Mirage,” which pretty much is what the story claims it to be: “I Think We’re Alone Now,” just in reverse. Perhaps as an inside joke, “Mirage” even includes “I Think..”‘s heartbeat section in reverse.

“Mirage” did not reverse the group’s fortunes. It didn’t chart as high as the song that inspired it, but a Number 10 charting was surely satisfying.

9) “Fever,” The McCoys (Bang, 1965)

Is having your very first single go to #1 a good thing or a bad thing? Don’t answer too quickly. Sure, it sounds ideal and like a great way to start your chart history, but it also means the pressure is already on because the only way to go is down, and any subsequent record that doesn’t go to #1 will seem like a comparative failure.

Well, despite making some fine 45s, the McCoys never did have another #1 after their 1965 debut “Hang On Sloopy” achieved as much, and their second single was as close as they ever got to repeating that accomplishment and their only return to the Top Ten. “Repeating” is an appropriate word, because they (or producers Bob Feldman, Jerry Goldstein, and Richard Gottehrer) rearranged the old Peggy Lee standard “Fever” to help the group hang on to the “Hang On Sloopy”-loving audience. Identical drum intro, lead-line altered to make it more Sloop-ish, same key, chorus rerouted to the “Sloopy” chord changes, and an almost indistinguishable guitar solo.

Most fans decided to hang on for another ride, as “Fever” got up to #7, but after “Fever” — like after any fever — things cooled down.

10) “Sitting In The Park,” Billy Stewart (Chess, 1965)

This is the only song on this list that actually charted higher than the song it replicates. (Only by two places, but still.)

Billy Stewart already had a number of singles out on Chess before finally making the national Top 40 in 1965 with his pleasant ballad “I Do Love You.” It was a slow-groove number that consisted almost entirely of repetition of a bar apiece of G to Am to Bm to Am, taking one temporary break from that for a bridge based in C major 7. The single made it to #26 on the pop chart and #6 on the R & B chart. The record-buying public loved him.

They must have, because when Billy released his next single, “Sitting in the Park,” which retained all of “I Do Love You”‘s birthmarks described above to the point that it almost sounded like Billy singing different words over the same backing track (only the slight difference in the chorus chords and the absence of the bass player temporarily losing his place in “I Do Love You” lets us know that’s not what happened) they bought even more copies of it. Before long, Billy was sitting in the charts at #24 of the Top 100 and #4 for the R & B list.

In the spirit of these songs, I shall sometime down the line do another list just like it. There are plenty of other examples of duplicate tunes; the ones on the above list simply being the first 10 pulled from the hat, so if there is what you think is an obvious one I did not mention, it’s probably still sitting in the stetson and will be covered in round two.

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[Edited 2/21/16 8:15am]

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