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Reply #30 posted 05/24/18 7:41am

JoeBala

Jimi Hendrix, Lenny Kravitz and Their Mutual Friend

Jimi Hendrix and Michael Goldstein, right, backstage at the Anaheim Convention Center in California, in 1968.CreditEd Caraeff/Iconic Images

By Vincent M. Mallozzi

  • May 24, 2018

In early May, Lenny Kravitz, the singer, songwriter and guitarist, made a special appearance in New York between the Mexican and European legs of his world tour.

Mr. Kravitz had gone to 450 Broome Street to visit Michael Goldstein, a 79-year-old retired New York entrepreneur by way of Cleveland who had made his mark in the music world some 50 years prior.

The man Mr. Kravitz referred to as “a mentor and a father figure” worked as a music publicist with bands like the Grateful Dead, Jefferson Airplane and Sly & The Family Stone during their heydays.

Mr. Goldstein greeted Mr. Kravitz with one of his riffs on the music industry.

“Michael began giving me all kinds of advice,” Mr. Kravitz said. “He started again with ‘You should do this and you must do that and you should not do this.’”

During the visit in May, Mr. Kravitz, a superstar in the 1990s who had recently resurrected his career, decided to make a recording in Mr. Goldstein’s home, because his friend was battling pancreatic cancer.

“He offered some great advice about concert tickets and so many other things,” Mr. Kravitz said. “He was always looking out for me.”


On May 19, Mr. Goldstein died, surrounded by his wife and three daughters at his Broome Street address, where he had lived since 1972.

Two weeks prior to his death, Mr. Goldstein discussed his legacy with the kind of energy that helped make some of his old clients famous.

“I served as a press agent for 10 acts at Woodstock,” he said. “Whenever or wherever there was a concert or a music festival, I was brought in to promote it.”

He had done well enough as a music promoter, he said, to start his own newspaper, The Soho Weekly News, which for a while was a sharp competitor with The Village Voice. (The Weekly News was published from 1973 to 1982; the Voice ended its print publication last summer.)

Image

Lenny Kravitz met Mr. Goldstein, who became his friend and mentor, when the two became neighbors in 1988.CreditTim Mosenfelder/Getty Images

“We had a really nice paper, we had a dance page which was supported by local dance ads, we had an arts page that was covered by advertising from art galleries,” Mr. Goldstein said.

“But what we needed to knock out The Village Voice was a great classified, and we simply didn’t have one,” he added. “That’s what really hurt us in the end.”

Mr. Goldstein moved on. He tried starting another newspaper, The Wall Street Final, which quickly folded. But starting in the 1980s, he found great success in selling a variety of items he had invested in and sold for profit on The Home Shopping Network, including 8,000 automobile covers he bought for $3 apiece from the racing driver Mario Andretti that he sold for $8 apiece.

Mr. Goldstein said he sold everything from “T-shirts to automobiles.”

“I was a salesman,” he said, “that’s what I did.”

In 1988, Mr. Kravitz, who was then working on his first album, “Let Love Rule,” moved into 450 Broome Street, one floor below Mr. Goldstein’s ninth-floor apartment, with his wife, a young television actress named Lisa Bonet, who was pregnant with their daughter, Zoe.

“Once I met Michael and found out who he was, I became very attracted to his history, especially the part where he worked with so many musicians,” Mr. Kravitz said.

Mr. Kravitz soon learned that his new neighbor was both a business rep and a good friend of Jimi Hendrix. Mr. Kravitz grew up idolizing Mr. Hendrix, whose onstage persona Mr. Kravitz has often imitated.

“Of all the bizarre coincidences,” Mr. Kravitz said. “I move in to a random building in New York and run into a guy who not only worked with Jimi but was a friend of his, just unbelievable.”

Soon Mr. Goldstein and Mr. Kravitz became “much more than neighbors,” Mr. Kravitz said. “In Michael’s eyes, I sort of became another Jimi,” he added. “He always told me I performed like Jimi, even reminded him physically of Jimi, and he went on to share with me the blueprint for success that he and Jimi had created together.”

Thirty years later, Mr. Goldstein was still imparting that wisdom to Mr. Kravitz, despite the fact that he was gravely ill.

“That’s why I had gone to visit Michael, I knew he didn’t have much time left and I wanted to say goodbye,” said Mr. Kravitz, his voice cracking, in a telephone interview from Paris, where he now lives. “Even though he was going through this traumatic event, he’s still giving me this great advice, the kind of advice I would never get again, so I thought, ‘Hey, why not record it, and I turned on my voice memo and did just that.”

When Mr. Goldstein died, his family quickly reached out to Mr. Kravitz.

“We called Lenny, he was very upset,” said Jocelyn Goldstein, one of Mr. Goldstein’s daughters. “Lenny has been like a brother to us all of these years, and now he feels as if he’s lost a father.

'My God, Michael Jackson is dead': The final hours leading up to the pop star's death

PHOTO: Michael Jackson addresses a press conference at the O2 arena in London, on March 5, 2009.Carl De Souza/AFP/Getty Images
WATCHA look at the final days of Michael Jackson

On June 25, 2009, Lisa Staub was driving a celebrity bus tour full of tourists and nearing Michael Jackson's home, when she was stopped by emergency personnel.

"We were just about to turn the corner, and as we did, there was a firefighter standing just off to the right, who held us just for a moment," she said. "We weren't sure why."

The reason: An ambulance was pulling onto the Jackson estate.

"The Last Days of Michael Jackson" airs tonite Thursday, May 24, at 8 p.m. ET on ABC.

PHOTO: The rented home of Michael Jackson seen from the air, June 29, 2009, in the Holmby Hills section of Los Angeles. Jackson died Thursday at UCLA Medical Center after being stricken at this rented home in Holmby Hills.Chris Carlson/AP
The rented home of Michael Jackson seen from the air, June 29, 2009, in the Holmby Hills section of Los Angeles. Jackson died Thursday at UCLA Medical Center after being stricken at this rented home in Holmby Hills.more +

Richard Senneff, a firefighter-paramedic, said he and his partner were wrapping up their lunch when an alarm came in around 12:25 p.m. for a cardiac arrest. He said they were told that the subject was a male, 50 years old, at 100 North Carolwood Drive.

Ben Evenstad, a paparazzi photographer who'd followed Jackson's career for years, said the house was right in the heart of Beverly Hills. On that day, he said, he got a call from another photographer that paramedics were at Jackson's house.

"A firetruck had shown up outside the house, and people, firemen, paramedics had gone into the house, and at that time we didn't think too much of it because there was always drama going on with Michael," Evenstad said.

But as firefighter-paramedic Senneff stepped out of the ambulance and onto the Jackson property, he quickly learned that the situation was dire.

PHOTO: Fans mourn for Michael Jacksons death during a candlelight memorial gathering at Yoyogi Park on June 27, 2009 in Tokyo, Japan.Sankei/Getty Images
Fans mourn for Michael Jackson's death during a candlelight memorial gathering at Yoyogi Park on June 27, 2009 in Tokyo, Japan.more +

"There was a security guard telling me that somebody needed to start CPR," Senneff said. "I immediately grabbed my equipment and entered the front of the house."

"As I arrived in the bedroom, there was some medical equipment in the room. ... I saw the gentleman who identified himself as a physician. He was quite frantic at the moment. He was sweating and he was attempting to move the patient. ... My partner looked up at me and mouthed the words: 'Michael Jackson.' And that's when I looked at him and recognized exactly who it was."

Jackson was loaded into the ambulance. Senneff said as he tried to maneuver out of Jackson's gated courtyard, his ambulance was met by what he described as a "circus."

PHOTO: Fans grieve outside the rented Holmby Hills home of music legend Michael Jackson after his recent death, in Los Angeles on June 29, 2009.Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images
Fans grieve outside the rented Holmby Hills home of music legend Michael Jackson after his recent death, in Los Angeles on June 29, 2009.more +

"Paparazzi ... people, tourists. There was even a double-decker tour bus," he said.

Staub, who was behind the wheel of that tour bus, said there were a lot of fans outside waiting.

"We saw a few security guards that worked for Michael Jackson that [were] over with the fans," she said. "Then we also saw a few paparazzi."

Evenstad said that once his crew had confirmed that the patient in the ambulance was Jackson, "I told my photographers, 'We need to get this picture.' ... That means there's a particular technique you use with a short lens and a flash to get a picture inside a vehicle, through a window."

Chris Weiss, a paparazzi photographer who worked for Evenstad, said he ran over to the ambulance as it was exiting the Jackson property.

"[I] tried to get a couple pictures of the back of the ambulance as it was moving," he said. "I came around to the side of the ambulance, unobstructed, I had a window and I just took picture after picture after picture after picture."

Evenstad says that after they learned he had passed away, "We knew we had the last picture of Michael Jackson -- and not just the last picture of him out and about shopping or whatever -- but of him in this state of passing away … we believe it was highest-selling or most valuable paparazzi photo ever taken and we believe it got into the seven figures."

Senneff said even after he'd reached the streets and then the hospital, it was "insanity."

"There were cars all around trying to get up alongside of us and cars driving next to us on the opposing traffic lane. ... When we arrived at the hospital, there was a helicopter overhead and dozens of paparazzi leaping out of car, running toward us," Senneff said.

At the UCLA Medical Center, where Jackson had been taken, doctors worked to resuscitate the pop star.

PHOTO: Fans weep and console each other outside outside the UCLA Medical Center following the death of music legend Michael Jackson on June 25, 2009 in Los Angeles.Mark Ralston/AFP/Getty Images
Fans weep and console each other outside outside the UCLA Medical Center following the death of music legend Michael Jackson on June 25, 2009 in Los Angeles.more +

"I went into the emergency room and I looked through the doors, the glass doors that they have in the emergency room. I saw LaToya [Jackson, Michael Jackson's sister]. She was leaning up against the wall. She was just staring blank into space. All of a sudden, she just slumped down onto the floor," said Brian Oxman, a longtime Jackson family friend and former attorney for Michael. "I said, 'My God, Michael Jackson is dead.' I knew it right away."

According to Jackson's older brother Jermaine Jackson, who spoke during a news conference later that day, the pop star died at 2:26 p.m.

Jermaine Jackson, 54, told the media that emergency-room doctors had worked to resuscitate the pop star for an hour after he'd arrived at the hospital.

"They were unsuccessful," he said. "May Allah be with you, Michael, always."

Marcus Miller - Laid Black (Advance Review)

marcus_miller_laid_back.jpg
1
Trip Trap

2
Que Sera Sera [feat. Selah Sue]

3
7-T's [feat. Trombone Shorty]

4
Sublimity ‘Bunny’s Dream’ [feat. Jonathan Butler]

5
Untamed [feat. Peculiar 3]


6
No Limit

7
Someone To Love

8
Keep 'Em Runnin

9
Preacher's Kid [feat. Take 6 & Kirk Whalum & Alex Han]

The Beatles' Esher Demos: The Lost Basement Tapes That Became the White Album

The group's jovial May 1968 home recordings mark the last time they sounded like true friends

Rob Sheffield looks back on the Beatles' intimate White Album demos in an excerpt from his book 'Dreaming the Beatles.' REX Shutterstock

Rob Sheffield's book Dreaming the Beatles: The Love Story of One Band and the Whole World is a celebration of the band, from the longtime Rolling Stone columnist. It tells the weird saga of how four lads from Liverpool became the world's biggest pop group, then broke up – yet somehow just kept getting bigger. Dreaming the Beatles, out in paperback on June 19th, follows the ballad of John, Paul, George and Ringo, from their Sixties peaks to their afterlife as a cultural obsession. In this section, Sheffield explores one of the Beatles' unheard treasures – the May 1968 Esher demos they recorded at George Harrison's pad, preparing for the White Album, not suspecting their friendship was about to turn upside down.

rob sheffield dreaming the beatles

The end of May, 1968: the Beatlesmeet up at Kinfauns, George Harrison's bungalow in Esher. Just back from India, gearing up to go hit Abbey Road and start their next album, the lads bang out some rough acoustic tunes into George's newfangled Ampex reel-to-reel tape deck. The result is one of their weirdest and loveliest unreleased recordings: the Esher demos. There's nothing else in their music quite like this. Most of the 27 songs ended up on the White Album, yet there's none of that record's tension and dread. At Esher, they're having fun; they don't realize all the tortures they'll inflict on each other making the White Album. Instead, it's a moment of jovial, intimate warmth – for almost the last time, you can hear they're still in love with being Beatles together.


In an excerpt from his new book 'Dreaming the Beatles,' the author looks back at the ups and downs of the former Fab Four adrift in the Seventies

Fifty years later, the Esher demos remain one of the Beatles' strangest artifacts. When the boys gathered at George's pad in the last days of May – nobody's sure of the exact date – they had excellent reason to feel cocky about their new material. They wrote these songs on retreat with the Maharishi in Rishikesh, India, a place where they had no electric instruments. They also had no drug connections, which might help explain why they came up with their sturdiest tunes in years. As John Lennon said years later, "We sat in the mountains eating lousy vegetarian food and writing all these songs. We wrote tons of songs in India." John, the most distractible Beatle, had the hot streak of his life during his three months in Rishikesh, which is why the White Album is their most John-intensive record. (The previous album with the mostest and bestest John songs was A Hard Day's Night, four years earlier.)

When the Beatles regrouped in England, they decided to get together and tape home demos on their own turf before stepping into Abbey Road – an innovation they'd never tried before and would never revisit. So they met at George's hippie bungalow in the Surrey countryside, decorated in the grooviest Indian style. John showed up with 15 tunes, more than Paul (7) or George (5). On the tape, you can hear them relax in an informal setting – they sit around the living room, banging guitars or tambourines or shakers, breathing in the joss stick. They recline on leather cushions – George and Patti don't have anything so square as chairs.


The Esher demos are a real treasure trove; they mined it for years. Songs that got worried to death on the album are played with a fresh one-take campfire feel, just acoustic guitars and handclaps. A couple of half-finished sketches got saved for Abbey Road ("Polythene Pam," "Mean Mr. Mustard"), others for their solo records (Paul's "Junk," George's "Not Guilty" and "Circles," John's "Child of Nature," which he later rewrote as "Jealous Guy"). They whoop through each another's songs – even "Honey Pie" rocks. They sound excited to hit the studio and knock something out in a few days, like they used to, back when they had to. Nobody knows the sessions will be an endless nightmare straining to duplicate the loose feel of the demos. "Ob-Li-Di, Ob-La-Da" will go through 47 takes. "Not Guilty" will require 102 takes and not even make the album.

On the tape, they sometimes speak to Mal Evans and Derek Taylor, presumably there to make tea or roll the smokes. Ringo's a quiet presence, though you can hear him bray away on "Bungalow Bill." Yet the vibe is friendly – it's like the White Album minus the hostility, which might mean it's nothing like the White Album. Some songs are still works in progress – in "Yer Blues," John is "insecure" rather than "suicidal," while George's "Piggies" eat pork chops instead of bacon. George sings the excellent "Sour Milk Sea," which he turned into a 1968 hit for his Liverpool mate Jackie Lomax, featuring Paul on bass and Ringo on drums. The lads keep trying to crack each other up, like when John does his mock doo-wop monologue in "I'm So Tired": "When I hold you in your arms, when you show each one of your charms, I wonder should I get up and go to the funny farm? No, no, no!"

At the end of "Dear Prudence," John tells the story of Prudence Farrow, though the madness he's singing about is really his own. "Rishikesh, India," he says over the final guitar lick, as the others chuckle. "No one was to know that sooner or later, she was to go completely berserk under the care of Maharishi Mahesh Yogi. All the people around were very worried about the girl, because she was going insane." He takes a deep breath. "So we sang to her."


It was a berserk time for the Beatles – all their lives changed within a few days. In the middle of May, John and Paul flew to New York to announce their new Apple Corps venture. They made a disastrous May 14 visit to The Tonight Show with Hollywood diva Tallulah Bankhead, who was no fan of "I Am the Walrus." It was a major get for NBC – the first time John or Paul gave an interview on any U.S. talk show. Unfortunately, Johnny Carson was on vacation. Instead, they had to make small talk with guest host Joe Garagiola, the Cardinals catcher turned sportscaster, who knew nothing about them and blew the TV opportunity of the year. (Garagiola: "What are you gonna do when the bubble bursts?" Lennon: "I haven't a clue, you know. I'm still looking for the bubble.") The 66-year-old Bankhead did her best to spice up the banter in her famous chain-smoking rasp: "I was eight years in England and never saw a cricket game, didn't understand one word of it. So how do you expect them to understand baseball?" Their comments about the Maharishi were wasted on Garagiola – the only Yogi he ever believed in went 10 for 24 in the '55 World Series.

But the really massive change happened within hours of John's return to England. He recorded Two Virgins with Yoko Ono in an all-night session where they wound up in bed for the first time, surprising poor Cynthia Lennon at breakfast and ending the marriage instantly. On May 30, the first day of the White Album sessions, the other three were stunned to see Yoko in the Abbey Road control room at John's side, where she remained permanently – even joining him on the microphone in the first day's version of "Revolution 1." From now on, they only had access to John through her. Paul, of all people, was the only one she felt gave her a proper welcome. "Paul has been very nice to me," she mused in her June 4 tape diary. "He's treating me with respect. I feel like he's my younger brother or something like that. I'm sure that if he had been a woman or something, he would have been a great friend, because there's something definitely very strong between John and Paul."


The Beatles spent five agonizing months making the White Album, often splitting up to work in separate studios. The fighting got so ugly Ringo quit for a week. In many ways, the Esher demos are the last recorded moment of the Beatles as a band. For the Get Back/Let It Besessions, they tried to re-create this basement-tapes spirit, but instead documented their sad demise. Seven of the Esher songs appeared on Anthology 3 – "Happiness Is a Warm Gun," "Glass Onion," "Junk," "Honey Pie," "Piggies," "Mean Mr. Mustard" and "Polythene Pam." The rest remain unreleased.

One of the most poignant moments is John's "Child of Nature," about India. ("On the road to Rishikesh / I was dreaming more or less.") Three years later, he recycled the melody for "Jealous Guy" – a love song to Yoko. But here John sings "I'm just a child of nature," in the same spirit as Paul singing "Mother Nature's Son." For these two city boys, nature was just a fantasy they shared, a family they could join to be brothers again. "Child of Nature" and "Mother Nature's Son" have virtually nothing do with nature – but much to do with each other, and the dream that everything they've broken can be healed. On the Esher demos, that bond of friendship is still holding the Beatles together. They would never sound as close again.

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Reply #31 posted 05/25/18 7:14am

JoeBala

Image result for QUEEN SUGAR 3RD SEASON Maxwell

Train Teams Up With Cam & Travie McCoy For New Single “Call Me Sir”

Mike Wass | May 24, 2018 11:58 am

Genres collide on Train’s new single. The veteran rockers, who have been churning out hits with impressive regularity since the ’90s, team up with country singer Cam and rapper Travie McCoy on “Call Me Sir.” And while both featured acts lend their individual flavor to the song, this wouldn’t sound out of place next to “Hey Soul Sister” and “Drive By” on a greatest hits album. “When I ride by myself, I don’t ever get no help,” Pat Monahan kicks off the track with his distinctive tone. “But when I roll up with her, everybody calls me sir.”

This isn’t a one-sided love song, however. Cam pops up later to add a female perspective. “He could break the law, he could break your heart in two,” she croons. “But I promise that you won’t care when he smiles at you.” Travie then closes out “Call Me Sir” with a verse that includes the memorable rhyme: “Every time we hit the streets it’s like a world premiere, she makes me feel like Sia swinging from that chandelier.” Listen to Train’s next radio hit below.

Listen:

Featured Album - Jeffrey Osborne says it is "Worth It All"

Listen to full album via spotify:

https://open.spotify.com/...o8k4tt9sCh

Swing Out Sister Are Ready to 'Breakout' All Over Again With New Album 'Almost Persuaded'

James Martin
Swing Out Sister

Listen to the premiere of "Happier Than Sunshine" below.

Swing Out Sister might just be ready for a new “Breakout.” That breezy piece of British pop became their signature when it wafted into the top 10 of the Hot 100 in 1987, having done the same in the U.K. late the previous year. It announced a debut album, It's Better To Travel, which hit No. 1 at home and was certified gold in the U.S., generating two Grammy nominations, including one for Best New Artist. To complete the time capsule, their fellow shortlisters included Cutting Crew, Breakfast Club and Terence Trent D'Arby, who all lost out to Jody Watley.

It's a musical lifetime later, but the group — then a trio, but comprised since the late '80s of vocalist Corinne Drewery and instrumentalist Andy Connell — have continued to create quality, jazz-infused pop, and have now arrived at their tenth album. As sometimes happens when a band continues at its craft and waits for the zeitgeist to come back around, media attention in the U.K. and beyond has been warm as Swing Out Sister prepares for the June 22 release of Almost Persuaded.

The self-produced set, self-released on Miso Music, was funded via PledgeMusic, through which it first appeared last November. It's a decade since the appearance of its predecessor Beautiful Mess and, as Drewery says, the result of many studio experiments. “It's ten years since our last album, but we have been doing lots of other things in between,” she says.

“This started out as a big band album. We tried several different approaches, and it's become an amalgam of three different angles. We always want to create something that surprises us as much as our listeners. It's got the same ingredients, but you don't want to do the same thing.”

Almost Persuaded boasts a sizable live horn section and shows how the duo's opulent sound has subtly evolved from those early hits. Their catalog also included a second U.K. top ten single in “Surrender” and subsequent entries such as “Twilight World” and the Barbara Acklin original “Am I The Same Girl.” “You have one, two, three albums and you try different things out,” notes Drewery, “but it's not until you get quite a bit further down the line that things settle and you find your style.”

That style is typified by the new album's uplifting “Happier Than Sunshine,” premiering below. “Think of this song as a great big hug and pass it on,” says the lead singer.

“I think there is a little bit of respect in there just for sticking around so long,” says Connell. “The only way we can judge it is at times like this when we're bringing a record to people. Over the past 20 years or so, we haven't been perceived [by the media] to be the thing that was required. Something has changed now.

“The one great thing we have, whether you like it or not, is that there's still a certain amount of name recognition,” he continues. “We go to America and Japan and people go 'Oh yeah, I vaguely know that,' so you've got a foot in the door.”

Adds Drewery with the group's trademark, self-deprecating wit: “We've had some funny reactions. A friend who's a Japanese promoter said 'My husband really likes this record, and he never usually likes your stuff.' She needn't quite have put it like that, but thank you.”

Indeed, in addition to their success on both sides of the Atlantic, Swing Out Sister have maintained a vast Japanese following, and tour there often: last summer, after a major North American itinerary, they embarked on an extensive Japanese schedule that included no fewer than six nights at Billboard Live in Tokyo.

“Different countries have their own set of rules,” Drewery says. “People say Japan is all J-Pop, but it's not. They're real jazz aficionados and they love the detail and any [musical] references you might make. It's not a kind of music they can make, so they want to study it.”

But as they prepare for more live work, the pair are also looking forward to their next U.S. visit, not least as the home of such lifetime inspirations as Burt Bacharach and Jimmy Webb. “We've had some great times in America and it's very close to our hearts,” says Drewery, “because a lot of our inspiration came from there.

“When we first had a hit there, it was weird, because we were making our version of the music from America that really inspired us. We took some of the ingredients of our favorite records, and then they came out differently.”

A Flock of Seagulls Talk Reunion, Orchestral Album & the Day They Wrote 'I Ran'

John Bryan
A Flock of Seagulls

For some bands artists lumped into the one hit wonder category, that one inescapable smash is the beginning and end of their story. But for A Flock of Seagulls, who are frequently and unfairly seen as one of the premier bands in that realm, it's a misnomer commercially and creatively.

Not only did the U.K. new wave band earn four Billboard Hot 100 hits (including three top 40 singles), but their self-titled 1982 LP was a pioneering mixture of angular guitar riffs, skewed melodies and vibrant synths; it's a bona fide classic, no qualifiers necessary.

But 23 years after their last album – and 34 years after gracing the Billboard Hot 100 -- what's left for the band to do? Well, there's obviously the touring route – and sure enough, they're in the midst of the Lost '80s Live tour with fellow new wave vets The Romantics and Men Without Hats. But additionally, they're delving into what has become a strangely satisfying late-career choice for bands: A symphonically augmented hits album (The Beach Boys and Foreigner have recently gone the same route).

Image result for A Flock of Seagulls

And for A Flock of Seagulls, their new album, Ascension, is something special – it finds the original quartet reunited on a recording for the first time since 1984, with Mike Score, Ali Score, Frank Maudsley and Paul Reynolds reteaming to rework gems like "I Ran (So Far Away)," "Space Age Love Song" and "Wishing (I Had a Photograph of You)" with the Prague Symphony Orchestra.

Ahead of its release, frontman Mike Score got on the phone with Billboard to talk about the reunion, writing their most iconic song and what he thinks about the band's continued pop culture relevance.

So Ascension is the first recording with the original four since 1984. Why now?

Twelve or so years ago we did a bit of a reunion, and that didn't work out well for me. I wanted to move on a bit for my own solo thing, so I gave it a go but then went back to my own thing. But this one, out of the blue, John Bryan (of August Day) said, "How would you feel about doing your hits orchestral?" And I never imagined doing anything like that -- but I'd like to hear it myself. So I agreed, and he said "well what about the original guys?" And I said "if you can get them, I'll do it." And they were into it. And everyone concerned with the original hits is playing on these new ones, so we didn't have to work hard. We just had to go back and do stuff we knew. And it's not like the old days where you had to be together -- [with the Internet] we could be recording in separate studios. So it was really easy.

Re-recording these well-known songs, was there some pressure? You have to think "well, we can't really best the hit version"?

We didn't want to change much, just add the orchestra and give it a different edge. A couple have different intros, but personally, if I see a band live, I don't like them to change it too much. So for me I went with that idea. And that was the quickest way for us all to play it. Because the record company was like "let's get this out in a couple months." We wanted to make it easy for ourselves and let the record company do the work, because it was really their idea.

With the Prague Symphony Orchestra, did you hear their stuff ahead of time?

Basically they sent us the stems the recordings of the orchestra, to see how it all fit together. We know nothing about orchestras, so we let an orchestral arranger work their magic. And what I heard sounded great. I would call it neo-retro-classical [laughs].

A lot of the reunion recording was done over email – did you actually get back together in person?

Well, we only got together for one day, and that was when we were making a video. And it just so happened that two of the guys were in Liverpool -- where we're basically from -- and I was there for a family visit, so it was quickly, "let's get together for an afternoon, do some filming." And it was good as far as nostalgia goes, we were chatting, and everyone knew let's not bring up old shit, so we got along nicely. And it was over and done, I came back to America and where it goes from there I'm not sure. I don't particularly want to get back together with the original band unless it's something spectacular – but maybe that will come along.

So you're not anticipating recording any new-new material?

No, not really. But we never expected this call. And if someone comes along and says "do you guys want to do an EP?" then we'll think about that. But the good thing to come out of it was, you get back together and realize, "we're still friends."

From the haircut to the fashion, you guys are closely associated with a very particular time. When you get back together in person, do you recapture a sense of that, or does it seem very distant?

It's very strange. When the four of us get together, there's a certain kind of magic. I think it's just a mixture of characters. Of playing styles. It's a one in a billion thing that happens. When I write my own stuff, it's got a Seagulls edge but it's me. But when Paul plays guitar over my stuff, it's more Seagulls, and Ali's drumming and timing. And our personalities and humors. It's difficult to put your thumb on it, but there's a certain magic.

You've been playing this stuff for decades now, doing faithful arrangements of the hits. Does it ever get tiring?

Not really! I think that shows how good the songs were. [Laughs] It doesn't get boring because playing the songs for me brings back memories. I remember writing "I Ran," that day, and it comes back to me playing it live. Basically at this point it's all muscle memory, so it gives your mind time to wander around and go through the rehearsals and the moment you wrote it.

A Flock of Seagulls backstage before their concert in Sunrise, Florida on July 4, 2015.

What was it like, the day you wrote "I Ran"?

We'd just been to the Cavern in Liverpool and saw a band play a song called "I Ran" and thought "what a great name," although we didn't particularly like the song. And then the next day saw a picture from the 1950s of a flying saucer and two people running away from it. And because we had this sci-fi thing going on, it was like "look at that! First 'I Ran' and now that!" So even though we had the basics of the music already, we went to rehearsal that night and the picture was in my head and we started to try to formulate words about that. And when I'm playing live, that picture comes back into my mind. And of course movies like Close Encounters of the Third Kind, the flying saucer coming out of the clouds, that contributed to lyrics, and all that comes through your mind and it makes you smile. Songwriting, I can only say it this way – I write the songs, but I don't write the songs. They come into my head, I do something, and then all of a sudden, I have a song. And I'm like "where did that come from?" I never think "I'm going to write a song." It's a weird channeling. It's like Akashic Records, you can reach mentally and pull it back down. And because I'm a songwriter that turns into a song.

Any plans to do the songs live with an orchestra in any capacity?

That would be something. A 50-piece A Flock of Seagulls. Now the album is almost ready to go, I think it's a case of letting it fly and seeing where it goes. I have a couple ideas, maybe we could have the orchestra on backing track or take out a quartet instead of a full orchestra. That's to be discussed, but right now I have a whole big tour through the summer called Lost '80s Tour, which is 40 shows, so I'm turning to that now.

Your band also pops up as a reference in plenty of movies and TV shows. "I Ran" was in La La Land, for instance – did you see that?

I did see it and I love it. Obviously financially – I think last year our music was in eight movies – and in a way to me that says the band still has... it's still in people's minds. They don't use music in movies unless they think it will fit what's going on. So 35 years later it's nice our music is still relevant and gets into movies. It's quite humbling in a way.

Steele Gets Confessional on 'Looking For You': Premiere

Kari Jaroszynska
Steele

Sara Steele fell in love with music after learning piano at the age of 5 and even went the classically trained route early in her career. The Swedish artist -- who performs mononymously under her surname -- soon discovered her true passion, which was to create music that resonates with her personally. Since then, Steele has crafted a dark pop sound that marries elements of post-rock and trip-hop.

Related image

Ahead of her debut album Paroxysm, Steele is premiering her new single "Looking For You" today (May 24) via Billboard. The delightful, electronic-tinged track is a follow-up to Steele's previously released ballad "Temporary Love" and shows off her versatile sound. The theme of sentimentality established on "Temporary Love" continues as "Looking For You" playfully tackles a paradox of emotions.

Image result for singer Sara Steele

"'Looking For You' is an embodiment of that feeling of being happy, devious and a little bit moonstruck at the same time, much like when you're determined for a mission - or just dancing senselessly at home alone," Steele tells Billboard.

The song features production from Charles Elmi and Dejan Sajinovic, who also worked with Steele on songs for her EPs Opium and Hiraeth. Those EPs have been combined with newer tracks to form Paroxysm, which is due out on June 13.

Soundcloud: https://soundcloud.com/i_am_steele

Youtube: https://www.youtube.com/c...leOfficial

Swedish songwriter Steele is releasing album Paroxysm on June 13, featuring singles 8am and Follow. Her sound is reminiscent of Banks and Lana Del Rey.

Check out the tracklist for Paroxysm below.

Paroxysm tracklist
1. Machine
2. Animal
3. Know Her
4. Opium
5. Temporary Love
6. Waiting
7. Knots
8. Deep Water
9. 8AM
10. Follow
11. Looking for You
12. Fade

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Reply #32 posted 05/25/18 7:17am

JoeBala

Raquel Sofia Sets the Mood in 'Reina Sin Corona' Video: Exclusive Premiere

Roberto De Jesus
Raquel Sofia

A throwback to variety shows of the past, the track's soulful ballad provides the perfect backdrop for the fictional "Studio Nights con Bobby Costa."

Raquel Sofia's new music video is an homage to Latin variety shows of the past. "Reina Sin Corona," or "Queen Without a Crown," begins with an introduction to her performance on the fictional Studio Nights Con Bobby Costa.

That introduction, a little reminiscent of the Saturday Night Live showcases introduced by celebrity guests, feels nostalgic. The melody of the song is inviting and the track's last five words are telling of a broken heart.

Raquel Sofia

From her latest album, 2:00 AM, Sofía presents a tender ballad that highlights her signature style, often anchoring a classic sound with touches of jazz, pop and soul.

"When I write my music, I can only write what I'm feeling," Raquel Sofía tells Billboard. "When I write songs, it's like therapy and by the time I'm done, I understand a little bit more."

2:00 AM

Tracklist

TITLETIME
1 4:15
2 3:48
3 3:37
4 3:23
5 3:51
6 3:55
7 3:34
8 3:23
9 4:13
10 3:48

"Reina Sin Corona" video here:

https://www.youtube.com/w...9Ne1L1fV0M

Upcoming Raquel Sofía Touring Dates:

June 13 - Foro Del Tejedor, Mexico City
June 14 - Querétaro (TBA)
June 15 - Aguafria, Monterrey
June 16 - La Muerte Chiquita, Toluca
June 17 - Puebla (TBA)

Sara Bareilles & Josh Groban to Host 72nd Annual Tony Awards

Brian Ach/Getty Images for Find Your Light Foundation
Josh Groban and Sara Bareilles are seen during the Find Your Light Foundation Gala hosted by Josh Groban at City Winery on June 6, 2016 in New York City.

Fresh from their Tony-nominated Broadway debuts, Sara Bareilles and Josh Groban will host the 72nd Annual Tony Awards on June 10 at Radio City Music Hall in New York.

Both are first-time Tony hosts who made their Broadway bows in 2017. Bareilles starred in Waitress, for which she also penned the music and lyrics. More recently, she sang alongside John Legend as Mary in NBC's Jesus Christ Superstar Live. Groban received critical acclaim for his lead role in the War and Peace-inspired musical Natasha, Pierre & The Great Comet of 1812. His eighth studio album is expected to drop later this year.

“The Theater has completely transformed my life in every way possible," Bareilles said in a statement. "I have never felt more embraced and encouraged by a professional community, and I am so grateful for that.”

Groban added: "I look forward to flailing about in front of my peers. It will be with all the love and respect in the world for the room we're lucky enough to be in." Leslie Odom, Jr. and current Waitress star Katharine McPhee will announce the 2018 Tony Awards nominations live on May 1 at 8:30 p.m. ET.

Watch the Groban and Bareilles' f-bomb-laden announcement video below.

Sara Bareilles@SaraBareilles

🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨🚨CRAZY AMAZING NEWS ALERT!!!! I literally don’t have words so I’ll do this with emojis...🙏🏽😭❤️👩🏻➕🧔🏻🔜🎤🎭🏆!!!!!! #TonyAwards2018

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Reply #33 posted 05/25/18 7:20am

JoeBala

MAY 24, 2018 11:44AM PT

Concert Review: Paul Simon Aces His Finals in Farewell Tour’s Hollywood Bowl Stop

In a generous 140-minute show, the retiring artist remained in top form and showed why we'll miss his band-leading and arranging talents as much as his rare sense of poetry.

In the mid-1970s, Paul Simon was worried about his image becoming too, too serious, so he welcomed the chance to host one of the very first episodes of “Saturday Night Live,” as Robert Hilburn’s new biography of the singer recalls. And for a few moments early in his show Tuesday night at the Hollywood Bowl — the first of three “Farewell Tour” gigs at the venue — he put on the turkey suit, figuratively speaking, and did some solemnity-dispelling shtick.

“It was a cold winter night when Paul Simon began his farewell tour in Los Angeles,” he quipped, addressing the unseasonal chill in the air. And then: “So, the thing about a farewell is… well, I’ve changed my mind. What it is is that it’s not so much a final tour that I like as I like raising the ticket prices to the level…”

Like any practiced standup, he knows when to let a joke trail off in the laughter rather than complete the punchline. Bit over, he waxed serious about the decision to hang up at least that particular ball cap this fall (the final shows are in New York City in mid-September, a few weeks shy of his 77th birthday). “The way I see it is like, aside from the word ‘final,’ which evokes words like ‘Oh, it’s final, so you didn’t study for your finals,’ I don’t know really what to make of the decision. I just find it somehow exciting to put some kind of casing around this entire career, and to look at it that way. So, I don’t intend to stop writing music, or playing it.” (A message in the souvenir program gets more specific, with Simon saying he “anticipate(s) doing the occasional performance in a (hopefully) acoustically pristine hall” for charity.)

Simon’s opening Bowl bow ran a generous two hours and 20 minutes, and only occasionally was there lull enough to think about the tens of thousands of man-hours devoted in a 61-year career to caring about music enough to constantly learn new tunings, types of poetic expression and international idioms, even as most of his contemporaries were content to ride on the fumes of early genius. There’s not often pure joy at the end of that much cerebral obsession, and yet, in Simon’s final L.A. engagement, the crowd got a set that, aside from its lyrical genius, swung in about 26 different ways in as many songs.

He’s maybe the only 1960s icon who successfully reinvented his music so many times that he almost could have overlooked that decade of origin without much trauma to the set. Fortunately, he didn’t test that hypothesis: The show opened with Simon & Garfunkel’s “America” — we’re still lost in it, as he noticed before Albert Brooks did — and ended, as his career began (not counting Tom & Jerry), with “The Sound of Silence.” That breakout hit was performed solo, and after all the celebration of the preceding 140 minutes, its spookiness served as a sobering reminder: He’s gonna make us lonesome when he goes.

The part of the audience that might still believe Simon peaked in the mid-‘60s and not a couple of decades later had to wait a while after “America” to get to the other Artie-less S&G tunes. Aside from a beautiful but ultimately teasing instrumental snippet of “El Condor Pasa,” these oldest oldies arrived in the copious encores, including “Mrs. Robinson” (which he rotated out on Wednesday night in favor of “American Tune”) and “Homeward Bound,” which provided the occasion for a career-retrospective video. He turned some of these ‘60s anthems almost explicitly into countrified traveling songs, with the finger-picking/slide help of Mark Stewart, the non-Nigerian half of his two-man lead guitar team. The most notably transformed piece in this late segment was “The Boxer,” which was partly recorded in Nashville, but never sounded like it was occurring in Nashville until it got an unexpected new shuffle beat… with a few understated cymbal crashes in the chorus serving as subtle nods to the grander pomp of the original recording.

One of Simon’s great talents as a band leader is being able to come up with fresh concert arrangements that drift far enough away from the studio versions to please listeners with curious ears but stick just close enough to the familiar that less adventurous souls don’t have cause to gripe, “I didn’t even recognize the songs!” (see: the men’s room after any given Dylan show). Sometimes this involved putting a different spin on the entire style of a song, but sometimes it just involved a solo. “Still Crazy After All These Years” maintains its New-York’s-alright-if-you-like-saxophones arrangement from the mid-‘70s, but when it came time for Andy Snitzer to recreate Michael Brecker’s iconic sax solo, he didn’t. Snitzer expanded on it, brilliantly and rousingly, in a way that really should be required studying for any classic rockers who believe boomer audiences want their solos replicated note for note. (Sax aside, the soloing highlight of the night belonged to keyboardist Mick Rossi, who ended “The Cool, Cool River” with some hot free jazz.)

The boldest leap away from the records came in a two-song segment that had Simon accompanied solely by yMusic, a half-strings/half-brass chamber pop sextet previously best known for collaborating with Ben Folds. The ensemble also provided backing during much of the rest of the show but got to show their classical chops on baroque-style versions of “Rene and Georgette Magritte With Their Dog After the War” and “Can’t Run But.” Clearly, Simon’s friendship with Philip Glass over the years has involved some osmosis and not just palling around.

But the spine of the show remains — as it has for every Simon tour of the last three decades — the world-beat-annexing stuff from his 1980s “Graceland” and “Rhythm of the Saints” albums. One solo that you probably don’t want to hear played any differently than it appeared on the record is the slap-bass break from “You Can Call Me Al,” here recreated not just once but twice for good measure by Bakithi Kumalo, the South African who created the part. The other “Graceland”-era stalwart of Simon’s 16-piece touring band, guitarist Vincent N’guini, died last December (in the tour booklet, Simon cites N’guini’s passing as “not the only reason I’ve decided to stop touring, but… a contributing factor”). He’s been replaced by a young Nigerian guitarist, Biodun Kuti, who shines throughout the show as the exotic-funk counterpoint to Stewart’s Americana moves, and who gets a particular workout on the set’s most specifically Brazilian number, “Spirit Moves.”

What kind of shape is Simon himself in? The demanding “Bridge Over Troubled Water,” you will notice, is not part of the farewell setlist, but while the set is dotted with more conversational songs that don’t require Garfunkel-esque boy-soprano chops, there are still plenty of songs that take place in a far higher key than the average 76-year-old man would have been capable of at 26. There was some unnecessary roughness in the opening minutes when the singer held a note in “Fifty Ways to Leave Your Lover” perhaps a few seconds longer than a more risk-averse veteran might have —but it was also an encouraging sign that Simon does not intend to hold anything back as he scoots toward the touring exit. And he really doesn’t need to; as his voice warmed up in the arctic May air, he sounded about as much like a preternaturally ancient choirboy as ever.

There are so many retirement tours suddenly in gear, from Elton John’s on down to Lynyrd Skynyrd’s, that it’s almost possible to take Simon’s for granted as part of a TTFN tide. It probably takes a reading of Hilburn’s excellent book to grasp the full scope of what he’s pulled off over six decades and realize how much this one hurts. Although Simon said on stage that he’ll keep writing songs, he hints toward the end of the biography that he might actually quit that, too, and focus on retrospective projects. (The tour book includes a link to download six pre-release songs from a long-promised revival album, “Alternate Tunings / Rare and Unreleased,” which hasn’t been officially announced yet, and mentions another mystery project, “In the Blue Light,” due in September.)

The two-year-old “Stranger to Stranger” album showed a Simon still working at pretty close to the peak of his powers. He only performed one song from that recording at the Bowl, “Wristband,” but it encapsulated the casual greatness of so much of his catalog, in the way that it used an idea so easily digestible that even the majority of the crowd that hadn’t bought the album could understand and laugh at — a rock star is reduced to being excluded with the hoi polloi when a bouncer demands to see his credentials — and then took that colloquial mirth as a jumping-off point to suggest something more profound about the societal anger of exclusion. Apart from all that, it also had an utterly slamming stand-up bass solo.

In the final encore, Simon’s own pick for his best late-period song, “Questions for the Angels,” mixed mundane details (a Jay-Z reference) with the mystical (a surprising declaration of belief in heavenly beings). And then that somber closing “Sound of Silence” proved that the morose child was father to the more spiritual man. Whichever message you took away from that pair of contrary closers, never let it be said that Simon didn’t ace his finals.

He wraps up his Hollywood Bowl run Monday, May 28. The tour’s final shows are set for Madison Square Garden Sept. 21-22 and a yet-to-be announced New York City gig Sept. 23.

MAY 24, 2018 2:35PM PT

‘Hair’ Set as NBC’s Next Live Musical

“Hair” will be NBC’s next live musical, the broadcaster announced Thursday.

The announcement comes on the heels of the critically-acclaimed NBC live staging of “Jesus Christ Superstar” on Easter Sunday. “Hair Live” is currently slated to air in spring 2019. Craig Zadan and Neil Meron, who have executive produced each of NBC’s live musicals since “The Sound of Music,” will executive produce the telecast.

“Hair” tells the story of a group of politically active hippies living a bohemian life in New York while fighting against and resisting the Vietnam War. Claude, his good friends Berger and Sheila, and their “tribe” are coming of age in the world of the sexual revolution while struggling with their rebellion against the war and their conservative parents and society. Claude must decide whether to resist the draft as his friends have done, or succumb to the pressures of conservative America to serve in Vietnam, compromising his principles and beliefs.

After an off-Broadway debut on Oct. 17, 1967, as the inaugural production of Joseph Papp’s now-legendary Public Theater, the show opened on Broadway in April 1968 and ran for 1,750 performances. “Hair” quickly became not just a smash-hit show, but a genuine cultural phenomenon that spawned a monster cast album and a number song on the pop charts for the Fifth Dimension. Simultaneous productions in cities across the United States and Europe followed, including a successful London production that ran for 1,997 performances.

Numerous productions of the show have been staged around the world, spawning dozens of recordings of the musical, including the 3 million-selling original Broadway cast recording. Some of the songs from its score became Top 10 hits, and a feature film adaptation was released in 1979, directed by two-time Oscar winner Milos Forman and choreographed by Twyla Tharp. A Broadway revival directed by Diane Paulus opened in 2008 at the Delacorte Theatre as part of the Public Theatre’s Shakespeare in the Park and then moved to Broadway in 2009, earning strong reviews and winning the Tony and Drama Desk Award for Best Revival of a Musical.

“Hair Live!” will be produced by Universal Television, MGM Television, and Zadan/Meron Productions.

The scheduling of “Hair Live” comes as NBC’s planned staging of “Bye Bye Birdie” starring Jennifer Lopez is still awaiting a premiere date. The latter production was originally slated for a winter 2017 debut but was pushed twice due to Lopez’s packed schedule, with it now scheduled to also air in 2019. A live version of Aaron Sorkin’s “A Few Good Men” is also still without a premiere date.

Rare Photos of Bruce Springsteen From David Rose's Exhibition 'Unseen Springsteen: Intimate Portraits'

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Reply #34 posted 05/28/18 7:59am

JoeBala

Lenny Kravitz Conjures Up Marvin Gaye On New Song “It’s Enough”

Lenny-Kravitz-Its-Enough-Cover.jpg

Just a couple of days ago we commemorated the anniversary of the 1971 release of Marvin Gaye’s classic album What’s Going On by spotlighting the song “Inner City Blues (Make Me Wanna Holler)”, a languid, soulful, bluesy lament for the ills of American society.

We talked about how influential Gaye’s album was and then lo and behold, before we could turn around, Lenny Kravitz releases a new song that not only sounds like a lot like “Inner City Blues”, it also has a very similar vibe and message as the landmark Marvin Gaye track. The irony is sad and delicious at the same time.

It’s not a bad thing that Kravitz would try to emulate the old master Gaye, because he most definitely has the qualifications to do so. If Lenny has done anything throughout an up-and-down career over the past twenty years, he has proven that he’s got musical chops coming out the yin-yang and knows how to really work a groove, and those things are on full display on the new record “It’s Enough”.

His biggest shortcoming has always been his lyrical content, and this is also on display here. Where Gaye’s lament had a spare, poetic edge to it, Kravitz verges on the sophomoric in his assessment of a world gone wrong:

What’s that going down in the Middle East?
Do you really think it’s to keep the peace
How we love to control a foreign land
Taking what we can is always the plan

rockcom.jpg

Whatever. He is trying to make a point with passion, and we can’t fault any artist for trying that, even if we don’t agree with them. It’s what artists are supposed to do. The song will appear on Lenny’s 11th studio album called Raise Vibration, which is due for release on September 7.

A11xhBfgFwL._SY355_.jpg

1. "We Can Get It All Together"
2. "Low"
3. "Who Really Are the Monsters?"
4. "Raise Vibration"
5. "Johnny Cash"
6. "Here to Love"
7. "It's Enough"
8. "5 More Days 'Til Summer"
9. "The Majesty of Love"
10. "Gold Dust"
11. "Ride"

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...wKb6TQ8alo

&

MJ Tribute?

https://www.youtube.com/w...-lgGgMMu2A

Watch Interview:

https://www.youtube.com/w...Ro-X6ztSDc

Loote On Their Collaboration With Joe Jonas & Debut EP: Interview

Mike Wass @mikewassmusic | May 25, 2018 12:12 pm
loote-interview-ep-2018-77215.jpg
CREDIT: Meredith Truax

Since meeting at college, Jackson Foote and Emma Lov have been on the same wavelength when it comes to pop. Their shared appreciation for the genre comes through in the hits they write for other artists (they penned Cheat Codes and Demi Lovato’s “No Promises”) as well as their own music. Since launching Loote, a portmanteau of their last names, the duo has landed streaming hits with “Out Of My Head,”“High Without Your Love” and “Your Side Of The Bed” — a trend that is set to continue with “Longer Than I Thought,” a collaboration with Joe Jonas.

I had a quick chat with Jackson and Emma their new single and they explained why Joe was the perfect collaborator for the song (they all identify with the lyrics). The hitmakers also opened up about their penchant for writing songs about exes and revealed that all four of their singles will be on their debut EP, Single. The seven-song set will be released on June 15. That coincides with their supporting slot on K-Pop star Eric

Nam’s North American tour, which kicks off on June 5 in Los Angeles. Get to know the duo a little better in our Q&A below.

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Tell me about “Longer Than I Thought.” How did you get connected with Joe Jonas?

Jackson: It was an idea that me and Emma started. It was one of those one-hour miracle songs that came together in the studio. We decided that it was really special and just evolved over the next couple of months. Then we decided to pair with another artist, because we felt like it would be the ribbon that tied everything together. We explored other options, but Joe sounds amazing on it.

Emma: All three of us had a similar experience and could identify with the lyrics.

Have you filmed the video yet?

Emma: We haven’t. Joe is currently in Australia, but we’ll link up when he comes back.

Jackson: We have a couple of music video ideas. We’ve been trying to brainstorm and get some ideas down for the video and we’re going to bounce them off Joe. I think he had an idea too when we were talking to him last week. So, yeah that’s going to be crazy.

Your EP is coming out soon. Will all the singles be on it?

Emma: Yeah. All the singles and new music. Got to give the people what they want, so it’s seven songs. Our three singles as well as “Longer Than I Thought” and three new ones. That are not to be spoken about yet.

Jackson: But they are super fire, super fire flames.

Emma: They’re fiery.

Emma: The EP comes out June 15 as of now.

Jackson: We’re doing a large seven-song EP and then we have one or two more songs that we want to release later in the year. This is an exciting time for us.

It’s almost like a mini-album with seven songs.

Emma: I agree. It’s definitely a long EP, but we had a lot to write about our exes. [Laughs].

Jackson: Each song felt so special to us that we wanted all of them to have their moment.

You do write a lot of songs about your exes.

Emma: Oh, we’re going to be writing songs about them for the rest of our lives. I mean the title of the EP is called Single, so it’s definitely about us being single.

Jackson: When Emma and I started working together, were in long term relationships and now we’re both out of those.

Emma: Kind of our separate and together journeys from being in relationships to getting out of them and figuring out ourselves as people as well as the relationship aspect. But it’s not just about our exes, it’s figuring yourself out, it’s about growing up. I was 17 when we started writing together, now I’m 22.

Jackson: It’s just naturally where our personalities and brains meet in a collaborative sense. We’re so close that it’s one brain really. We know everything about each other’s lives because we travel together and are together all the time, so we know what’s going on and we know if there’s not a lot going on in my life, then there’s probably a lot with Emma. So one of us is usually going through some shit.

31948805_650848255250227_8117015833231753216_o.jpg?_nc_cat=0&_nc_eui2=AeFyycMH0dlKLlVk9SzpmAjGWaAQXg43IbiLp0n1JzHLpzsIxiqcC_OPdvA-BkvzboVKYDwaH59OOLCifp0-fAPr8580YVxTROeJo1r-G5Er4Q&oh=f4c5669126062b60fb2ab846312c268e&oe=5B8D67B6

I love about your music is so unashamedly pop. Was that a conscious decision?

Emma: Honestly, when we first started writing, I think we tried and failed spectacularly at making it not pop music. We were kind of like, “No, it’s pop music.” Our influences are not only pop, but whenever we go to write, I end up sounding bubbly as hell on everything I sing.

Jackson: I’m obsessed with pop music. As songwriters, we wrote for other artists before we rolled out our artist project. We have a background in pitch writing and sitting down, trying to write a song that you think could be a hit for another artist. You don’t want to try to put a lid on it or try to make it something it’s not, it just kind of naturally how our stuff falls.

Emma: When I was younger, I was really embarrassed that I loved pop songs. I was so embarrassed that I was a pop singer/songwriter and I would try really hard to not sound like that, but no matter what I did, I would always sound like that. So when I got to college and Jackson and I got paired together for this random assignment, I showed him an idea that I had been working on and he was the perfect person flesh it out. We were both like, “Oh my god, this is a dope pop song.” It was the first time I clicked with somebody that was into the same thing I was into.

Are you still writing songs for other people? I loved “No Promises.”

Emma: Yeah, we actually we’re in the middle of something right now.

Jackson: We have one we wrote a couple months ago and a couple really big DJs are both really interested in it, so we’re in that phase where we’re like, “Oh this might be a whole thing that we’re not even aware of.”

Emma: It kind of feels similar to “No Promises,” actually. All of a sudden it’s just like, “Oh, it’s real.”

Are there any songs you wish you wrote?

Jackson: I mean, most of them. Let’s see, off the top of my head, “The Middle.” I’m obsessed with that song.

Emma: One of my favorite songs is “Toxic.” It’s definitely an oldie at this point, but I really wish I wrote that song. Every time I hear that song I wish I wrote it.

You’re going to be touring with Eric Nam. Are you in K-Pop?

Emma: I’m getting more into it now.

Jackson: Yeah, it wasn’t even on our radar until we became involved through Eric Nam and BTS.

Emma: One of the guys from BTS had our song in one of his tour diary videos. It’s funny, I ran into two fans of theirs in the bathroom at the Billboard Music Awards. They were talking about him and then they saw me and vaguely knew who I was and I was like, “Yeah my song was in that video.” And they were like, “Oh my god, that’s how we know you,” and these three girls were just talking to me for twenty minutes. It’s such a fandom, it’s amazing.

18673022_480498868951834_2268886437912673530_o.jpg?_nc_cat=0&_nc_eui2=AeGYYt1IVV8mpWafZRp8q-sogYxAsbPznebZjRfPrxluI2kwpN0PZXoXN0MgrhIGmwkkdkS_o5yXMtQxJbZf1q6nIiuDZtYgs3pv9iGITJjGiA&oh=fbd59da6db67250b66b9d3a2e326e36a&oe=5B84FDBE

You have collaborated with Martin Jensen and Joe Jonas. Who else is on the list?

Jackson: Oh my gosh, so many. I’d love to work with Julia Michaels. I know I probably just took Emma’s answer. Julia Michaels and Shawn Mendes. As a songwriter, my dream collaborator would be Max Martin.

Emma: I would want to work with Brendon Urie or Halsey. He did take my Julia Michaels answer, but it’s okay we can work with her together. I also want to work with Twenty One Pilots except that I know that Tyler Joesph doesn’t work with anybody, so even in my head that just immediately is not an option.

Good luck with the song!

Jackson:Thank you so much, we're so excited. Emma:Thank you!

https://www.youtube.com/w...oyrt2q-Pwk

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Published on May 24th, 2018 | by Darren Paltrowitz

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Meiko On Her New “Playing Favorites” Album, Why She Is Loyal To Gibson Guitars & More

Although she was performing throughout her childhood in her native Georgia before her teen years, 2007 was a breakout year for singer/songwriter Meiko. For starters, it was when she performed at the Sundance Film Festival, was featured on the KCRW staple Morning Becomes Eclectic, and hit the road with Brett Dennen and Mat Kearney. A major label deal came about the following year in 2008, and her 2012 full-length The Bright Side had a major international hit single with “Stuck On You.”

A proper follow-up to 2016’s Moving Day — which hit the #9 spot on the Billboard Top Heatseekers chart — Playing Favorites is the new full-length from Meiko, as released on May 25th via Chesky Records. While Playing Favorites is a “covers album,” Meiko puts a unique spin on songs from a variety of genres, essentially reinventing a bunch of songs you were used to hearing performed a particular way. Among the artists paid tribute to by the Nashville-based artist are Rick James, Erykah Badu, Sade, Duran Duran, Portishead, Ben E. King, The Cranberries, Mazzy Star, Jennifer Paige, and Blind Melon.

I had the pleasure of doing with Q&A with Meiko, and highlights of such are below. More on Meiko can be found online at www.meikomusic.com.

Where did the idea for a covers album come from?

Meiko: I’ve always wanted to make a covers album featuring songs that influenced me along my journey as an artist. When I was given the opportunity to make a live record with Chesky Records, I jumped at the chance to make it all covers, and I’m so glad I did!

Around how many songs were on your consideration list before you started recording?

Meiko: I considered about 20, but narrowed it down to what was finally put onto the album.

How long did you actually spend recording the album?

Meiko: We spent one — very! — full day in an abandoned church in Brooklyn and recorded the whole thing!

Which of the songs was the most difficult to record?

Meiko: Probably “Come Undone” because I wasn’t sure if it sounded good. It ended up being a few people’s favorite at the end, so I figured they were hearing something that I wasn’t — so we went with it.

Might there be a second album, or an EP, of covers from you in the future?

Meiko: I had such a good time with my band making this album, so maybe!

Playing Favorites aside, what is coming up for you in your career?

Meiko: I’ve been writing a lot lately. I have a full album’s worth of brand new songs written, and I’m gonna focus on putting my fifth studio album out at some point. I’ll probably record beginning in the fall and have it ready to come out in early 2019. I’ve also got some concert dates in the midwest and west coast in the fall so those will be fun!

You are known to have very vintage Gibson guitars. When did you first acquire these guitars?

Meiko: I started this obsession on my first tour. I remember it very clearly. We were in Madison, Wisconsin and we stopped by this place called Spruce Tree Music and Repair. I fell in love with a 1942 Gibson LG-2 and the owner of the store made me promise that I would love it forever and never add a pickup to it. I’ve kept my word and kinda got addicted to old guitars from that point. I was convinced for a time that every new — old — guitar I played would help me write a new song.

What is it that draws you to vintage Gibsons? I assume you started out on more basic guitars, of course.

Meiko: Yes. My first guitar was a Vantage when I was 13. My dad wasn’t sure if I was gonna stick to playing, so he got me the best cheapest guitar he could find. I still have it, and it still sounds awesome, But I guess my love for vintage guitars started with my dad having a 1960s Gibson that he would never really let me play. Maybe it’s a weird way of rebelling now as an adult…

When not busy with your career, how do you like to spend your free time?

Meiko: I love being a mom. I love everything about it. I have a two-year old son and he makes my heart happy every day. I love playing music with him, for him, and showing him my sweet dance skills in the kitchen!

What was the last concert you attended for fun?

Meiko: I saw Now Now the other night in London and they were great. Sweet indie-pop stuff. Look them up!

Finally, Meiko, any last words for the kids?

Meiko: Wear sunscreen.

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Tracklist:
01 – Zombie
02 – Stand By Me
03 – Crush
04 – No Rain
05 – Fade Into You
06 – (Sittin’ On) The Dock Of The Bay
07 – Wandering Star
08 – Come Undone
09 – No Ordinary Love
10 – Super Freak
11 – Show Me Love
12 – Bag Lady
Listen to Super Freak: https://www.youtube.com/w...k9hy4nOJIs

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TITLE TIME 1
Pull Me In
3:36 2
Feel the Beat
4:00 3
Sunday Night
3:03 4
Like a Virgin
3:07 5
A Boy That I Know
3:07 6
Trooper
3:40 7
One Minute Man
4:01 8
Problem
3:45 9
Oh Babe
2:39 10
So Low
2:54 11
Surf Me In
2:55
  • Released: Mar 24, 2017
  • ℗ 2017 Ellen Birath and the Shadow Cats

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Watch:

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https://www.youtube.com/w...ZpTuIfJEbc

Video: ZAYN Hits The Strip Club For His ‘Entertainer’ But Did It Work?

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BySingersroom
Posted on May 25, 2018
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Pop/Soul singer ZAYN is dealing with the weight of lost love in the aftermath of a breakup.

In the music video for his latest single, “Entertainer,” the singer and songwriter mulls over losing his main chick and visits a strip club to clear his thoughts but it all backfires.

ZAYN gets caught up in the aura of a stripper that resembles his Ex, who used to be his favorite entertainer, which brings back memories of their past together.

“You’re my favorite entertainer,” the former One Direction star sings. “I’ll watch you, I’ll laugh / And will fuck with you / Don’t take me for a fool / In this game I own the rules.”

“Entertainer,” penned and recorded in Doylestown, Pennsylvania, will appear on ZAYN’s forthcoming sophomore album, the follow-up to 2016’s Mind of Mine.

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...oG07pt-KYI

POP

Video: Craig David – Magic Ft. Yxng Bane

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BySingersroom
Posted on May 25, 2018
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Craig David recently unveiled the hype music video for “Magic,” a record featuring London rapper Yxng Bane, who David says “has an incredible future.”

The island-tinged song is the lead offering off David’s seventh studio album, ‘The Time Is Now,’ which arrived back in January (2018).

The visual is simple as David and Bane exchange verses against a backdrop, which switches back and forth to female dancers performing various choreograph moves.

Craig says of the song and collaboration with Bane: “So happy to have Bane jump on this tune. Magic is one of my favorite records on ‘The Time Is Now’ and to have someone as big in the scene as Bane be on the record is amazing. He has an incredible future so it’s great to be collaborating.”

“Magic” follows previously released singles like “I Know You,” “Heartline” and “For The Gram,” all from David’s new album, which includes collaborations with JP Cooper, AJ Tracey, Ella Mai, Kaytranada, and GoldLink.

“The motivation and inspiration behind this album was all down to the huge realization that even when I wasn’t as focused, there were amazing lessons to be learnt,” David previously stated. “Making the choice to dive in to the unknown, build TS5 from the ground up and work with a new wave of producers to focus on the only thing that matters NOW ..making great music for you.”

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...gQm-7Bmx0c

[Edited 5/28/18 8:12am]

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Bill Murray, Gina Gershon, Steve Buscemi Celebrate Bob Dylan at Birthday Tribute

The May 24 concert was produced by Hal Willner and held at New York's Town Hall.

Bob Dylan’s 77th birthday was celebrated with a kinetic reimagining of his 1963 solo concert at New York’s Town Hall. Titled Tomorrow Is A Long Time, the May 24 event produced by Hal Willner featured a slew of talented guests — among them: contemporary performers like The Milk Carton Kids, Emily Haines and Teddy Thompson, 60’s survivors like Geoff Muldaur and Bob Neuwirth, poetess Anne Waldman and savvy stage performers like Gina Gershon, Steve Buscemi and Bill Murray — and followed the original concert’s set list, providing ardent, idiosyncratic musical settings for Dylan’s songs with barely a hint of nostalgia. Musical Director Steven Bernstein and the Town Hall Ensemble led the tribute, which was filled with humor, social commentary and an impressive range of musical styles.

While Dylan’s original concert was a solo acoustic affair, the brawny Town Hall Ensemble contained a number of amazing musicians including bandleader Bernstein on trumpet, Wilco-guitarist Nels Cline, keyboardist Marc Cary and violinist Zach Brock. Enjoying a full assortment strings, horns and a badass rhythm section, the Ensemble infused the varied guest performances with funk and Latin rhythms, playing jazz, soul and rock as well as some more traditional folkie terrain.

In terms of songs, when Dylan performed at Town Hall in 1963 he was about to release his second album, “The Freewheelin’ Bob Dylan,” and was already playing iconic tunes like “Blowin’ In The Wind,” “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” and “Masters Of War” as well as less-remembered compositions like “Highway 51” and “Seven Curses”

Setting an eclectic tone, the Town Hall Ensemble opened with an instrumental version of “Ramblin’ Down Thru The World” that showcased the formidable guitar skills of Cline. From there it was off to the races with Haines tackling “Bob Dylan’s Dream” and Laurie Anderson putting her particular spin on “Talkin’ New York.” Singers Lisa Fisher and Teddy Thompson came together for a stunning duet on “Ballad Of Hollis Brown.”

Dylan’s old confidant Bob Neuwirth sang the obscure composition “Walls Of Red Wing” and Geoff Muldaur performed a straightforward version of “Boots Of Spanish Leather.” In between those two veteran performers, Steve Buscemi (pictured below) gave his crowd-pleasing all, emphatically inhabiting the “Talkin’ John Birch Paranoid Blues” with appropriate urgency.

New York - MAY 24, 2018 - "Tomorrow is a Long Time" - Songs from Bob Dylan 1963 Town Hall Concert.

Peter Wolf brought his rock ‘n’ roll panache to “Hero Blues” and acknowledged that as a young obnoxious kid from the Bronx, he remembered swigging cough syrup while taking the D Train to go see the original 1963 Dylan concert. The Milk Carton Kids had the honor of singing “Blowin’ In The Wind” and Teddy Thompson returned for a great performance of the stridently anti-war song, ‘John Brown.”

Joan Wasser exhibited commanding star power singing “Tomorrow Is A Long Time,” and Lisa Fisher closed the first set with a dynamic rendition of “A Hard Rain’s Gonna Fall.” Ms. Fisher received a standing ovation and is certainly one to watch.

The second set was even more eclectic, with singer Mark Kozelek riffing confidently through “Who Killed Davy Moore?” and writer-musician Greg Tate ranting righteously on “Seven Curses.” NRBQ pianist and singer Terry Adams ripped though “Highway 51” and The Milk Carton Kids supported none other than Triumph The Insult Comic Dog for an incendiary routine segueing into “Pretty Peggy-O.”

A fetching Gina Gershon knocked everyone out singing “Bob Dylan’s New Orleans Rag” while accompanying herself on the Jew’s harp. Bill Murray, along with Joan Wasser, charmed his way through “Don’t Think Twice, It’s All Right” while Waldman enlivened “Hiding Too Long” with old-school grace.

Although the show concluded on a commanding note with Kozelek singing “With God On Our Side” and Haines closing with “Masters Of War,” it was the final act of Neuwirth reading his old pal’s epic poem, “Last Thoughts On Woody Guthrie,” that reminded everyone in the room about the importance of celebrating the work of a legend one more time.New York - MAY 24, 2018 - "Tomorrow is a Long Time" - Songs from Bob Dylan 1963 Town Hall Concert.

Sting to Receive Honorary Degree From Brown University

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The Rhode Island school will present him with the degree at its 250th commencement Sunday.

Ivy League school Brown University will bestow an honorary degree to English musician Sting.

The Rhode Island school will present him with the degree at its 250th commencement Sunday. Nobel Prize-winning physicist J. Michael Kosterlitz is among other honorees.

Sting formed the pioneering British rock band The Police with Stewart Copeland and Andy Summers in 1977. He co-founded an environmental organization, the Rainforest Fund, to protect the world's rainforests.

Seniors are proceeding to the First Baptist Church in America from the Brown campus before commencement. Located in Providence, it's the oldest Baptist church congregation in the U.S.

BET Awards: Jamie Foxx Set to Host

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Jamie Foxx

This marks his second time as emcee of the show, which will air live June 24 from the Microsoft Theater in Los Angeles.

Jamie Foxx has signed on to host the 2018 BET Awards.

When the actor-musician-comedian walks onto the Microsoft Theater stage in Los Angeles on June 24, it will mark the Academy Award and Grammy Award winner’s second time as host of the show.

Foxx, host and executive producer of the interactive game show Beat Shazam, first helmed the BET Awards in 2009. That’s when the ceremony doubled as an all-star tribute to Michael Jackson, who had died unexpectedly several days earlier. Saturday Night Live’s Leslie Jones hosted last year’s show, which featured memorable performances from Bruno Mars, Mary J. Blige, Migos and lifetime achievement honorees New Edition.

DJ Khaled leads the 2018 nominees slate with six nods, including album of the year, two for best collaboration (“Wild Thoughts” with Rihanna and Bryson Tiller; “Top Off” with Jay-Z, Future and Beyonce) and video of the year. Kendrick Lamar follows close with five nominations, while SZA and Migos each have four.

BET executive vp/head of programming Connie Orlando serves as executive producer of the awards show this year along with Jesse Collins Entertainment CEO Jesse Collins. As in previous years, the ceremony will close out the BET Experience at L.A. Live presented by Coca-Cola (June 21-24), now in its sixth year. The 18th annual BET Awards will air live June 24 (8 p.m. ET).

Italy's Ischia Fest to Honor Quincy Jones With Lifetime Achievement Award

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Ischia chair Cheryl Boone Isaacs with Quincy Jones

The musician and record producer — who has racked up an incredible 79 Grammy nominations and 27 Grammys, as well as a Grammy Living Legend Award, over his 60-year career — will receive the William Walton Music Legend Award.

Quincy Jones is set to add another award to his collection.

The musician and record producer — who has racked up an incredible 79 Grammy nominations and 27 Grammys, as well as a Grammy Living Legend Award, over his 60-year career — will receive the William Walton Music Legend Award at the 2018 Ischia Global Film and Music Festival. The lifetime achivement award will honor his groundbreaking career as a musician, producer, humanitarian and executive.

Jones will be on hand on the Italian island off the coast of Naples to receive his award on July 18.

“The immensity of Quincy Jones’ talent knows no bounds,” said festival founder Pascal Vicedomini and chair Cheryl Boone Isaacs in a statement. “We are truly honored to add the Ischia William Walton Music Legend Award to his extensive list of accolades.”

Named after the British composer who spent his last days in Ischia, the honor recognizes those who have made significant contributions to music and entertainment. Previous recipients include Sting, Burt Bacharach, Harry Belafonte, Mike Stoller, Sir Tim Rice, Julio Iglesias, Andrea Bocelli and Luciano Pavarotti.

The 16th annual Ischia Global Film and Music Festival is set to run July 15-22. This year, the Andrea Bocelli Foundation will receive the fest's humanitarian award. More guests are expected to be announced in the coming weeks for the popular summer event.

Björk review, All Points East, Victoria Park: the magnificent singer flowers yet again

Björk at All Points East, Victoria Park
Björk at All Points East, Victoria Park CREDIT: SANTIAGO FELIPE/GETTY

As the inaugural All Points East came to a close on Sunday, there were many highlights during the countdown to the main event: the jubilant return of emo-disco band Friendly Fires; 2018’s must-see DJ, The Black Madonna, playfully teasing her crowd with dynamic house and techno; LA producer Flying Lotus’s psychedelic combination of mutant hip-hop and 3D visuals; Beck’s cover of Raspberry Beret. But Sunday was, above all, about Björk and the unveiling of the stage version of her 2017 album Utopia.

And what an unveiling it was. A poem by Persian philosopher Rumi scrolled on-screen: “Beyond ideas of wrong or right, there is a field. I’ll meet you there”. A revolving centrepiece covered in foliage turned to reveal Björk, dressed as a bioluminescent orchid with pearls for eyes. Nestled among the leaves, a troupe of flute-wielding pixies. The Icelandic powerhouse had even clearly pulled some strings with mother nature to bring in an exclusive lightning show, as thunderbolts criss-crossed the sky in the near distance.

Björk at All Points East, Victoria Park
Björk at All Points East, Victoria Park CREDIT: SANTIAGO FELIPE/GETTY

Utopia is more of a musical than an album, an magical electronic soundscape across which skip Björk’s musings about finding love after the breakdown of her marriage. Live, it became a lavish spectacle of whimsy, though certainly not a theatre-piece to appease the masses and enough woodwind overkill to make even avant-gardists never want to hear another flute again.

With its spiky blooms of crystalline synths like neurons firing to life, Arisen My Senses signalled the show’s mesmerising romance, while the album’s title track came off like a botanical Swan Lake with its dancing-pixie flautists. Björk cut through the fantasy, meanwhile, with the encore, introducing Features Creatures as being “inspired by a visit to [local record shop] Rough Trade East”.

Björk at All Points East, Victoria Park
Björk at All Points East, Victoria Park CREDIT: SANTIAGO FELIPE/GETTY

To some, the show’s theatricality was self-indulgent and unrelentingly dull; to others, it was unbridled artistry at its most immersive. It didn’t help that a supposed technical fault meant that the action wasn’t blown up on the big screen, instead only images of fields of wheat and computerised flowers. The crowd wasn’t happy either that she eschewed her earlier, ravier material for ballads that flowered into more abstract thunderous techno, such as Losss, from Utopia, and Notget, from 2015’s Vulnicura.

But there was extra poignancy, perhaps, in what older tracks she did include: Isobel from 1995’s Post, and 1993’s Human Behaviour. These two trip-hop-styled songs were both about a girl who is born in a magical forest and whose instinctive way of thinking clashes with the big city’s logic-driven way of living. On Sunday night, Björk seemed to be saying that you have to give yourself over willingly to her paradise instead of trying to find the headline festival set that’s not there. Only then will you truly reap the rewards.

Public Image Ltd. Unveil Huge 40th Anniversary Box Set

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'The Public Image Is Rotten (Songs from the Heart) Box Set' features singles, B-sides, rarities and more
Public Image Ltd. Unveil Huge 40th Anniversary Box Set

Public Image Ltd. are celebrating a true milestone in 2018, with John Lydon's post-Sex Pistols project reaching their 40th anniversary. To mark the occasion, the UK post-punk legends are treating fans to a seriously massive box set.

The PiL anniversary package is called The Public Image Is Rotten (Songs from the Heart) Box Set, and it will be released on July 20 via UMe.

The set will arrive in two configurations: a 5CD/2DVD set and a 6LP set. Within, the box set will feature the PiL Singles Collection (1978-2015), B-sides, rarities and radio sessions, 12-inch mixes, and unreleased mixes and tracks. There's also a live concert from New York Ritz captured in July 1989.

The DVD includes PiL promo videos and footage from the band's appearances on the BBC's Top of the Pops and Old Grey Whistle Test. Plus, there are two live concerts: PiL's appearance at the Tallinn Rock Summer Festival in Estonia 1988 and one from 2013's Enmore Theatre in Australia during the "This Is PiL" tour.

You can see the impressively long tracklist to the box set down below in detail.

The box set coincides with the release of a career-spanning documentary film about the band also titled The Public Image is Rotten, which premiered at select festivals last year. The film was directed by Tabbert Fiiller, and it will be released later this year in select theaters.

Lisa Stansfield: 'Corbyn comes across as a real smart-arse'

English singer on her latest album 'Deeper', thoughts on UK politics and women in the music industry, plus why she still really, really wants to meet Adele

  • Elizabeth Aubrey
  • 5 days ago

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Read the interview: https://www.independent.c...65391.html

CHVRCHES: Live at House of Vans

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Watch The Full Concert: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fGiqCmZvkJ8&t=943s


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Upcoming Soul Music Album Releases

Tower of Power - The Soul Side of Town (June 1)

Freddie Jackson - Love Signals (June 4)

Michael Franks - The Music In My Head (June 8)

Dennis Coffey - One Night at Morey's (June 8)

Michael Lington - Silver Lining (June 8)

Ne-Yo - Good Man (June 8)

Joe Lington - Trust (June 15)

Show Tyme - Love Truth (June 15)

Dave Koz - Summer Horns II (June 22)

Smoove and Turrell - Mount Pleasant (June 29)

The Suffers - Everything Here (July 13)

Peabo Bryson - Stand for Love (August 3)

Candi Staton - TBA (Summer)


On June 1, a week before Roger Daltrey begins a tour where he'll perform Tommy with an orchestra, the Who singer will release As Long as I Have You. This will be Daltrey's first record since Going Back Home, his 2014 collaboration with Dr. Feelgood guitarist Wilko Johnson.

As Long as I Have You includes covers of songs written by Stephen Stills ("How Far"), Stevie Wonder ("You Haven't Done Nothing"), Nick Cave ("Into My Arms") and Garnet Mimms (the title track). Daltrey also wrote some of the songs, notably "Certified Rose" and "Always Heading Home."

You can listen to "As Long as I Have You" below.

For the singer, it's a return to his roots mixed with the wisdom that can only come with age. "This is a return to the very beginning, to the time before Pete [Townshend] started writing our songs to a time when we were a teenage band playing soul music to small crowds in church halls," Daltrey said in a statement.

"That’s what we were, a soul band," he continued. "And now, I can sing soul with all the experience you need to sing it. Life puts the soul in. I’ve always sung from the heart but when you’re 19, you haven’t had the life experience with all its emotional trials and traumas that you have by the time you get to my age. You carry all the emotional bruises of life and when you sing these songs, those emotions are in your voice. You feel the pain of a lost love. You feel it and you sing it and that’s soul. For a long time, I’ve wanted to return to the simplicity of these songs, to show people my voice, a voice they won’t have heard before. It felt like the right time. It’s where I am, looking back to that time, looking across all those years but also being here, now, in the soulful moment”

Daltrey worked with a band that includes former Style Council keyboardist Mick Talbot and Sean Genockey on lead guitar. Townshend contributed guitar on seven tracks, and noted that the record “shows Roger at the height of his powers as a vocalist.” The record was produced by Dave Eringa.

You can pre-order As Long as I Have You at the Who's official store. While there, you can also register to win one of 10 signed test pressings of the record. June 22 release date.

Roger Daltrey, 'As Long as I Have You' Track Listing
1. "As Long as I Have You"
2. "How Far"
3. "Where Is a Man to Go?"
4. "Get on Out of the Rain"
5. "I’ve Got Your Love"
6. "Into My Arms"
7. "You Haven’t Done Nothing"
8. "Out of Sight, Out of Mind"
9. "Certified Rose"
10. "The Love You Save"
11. "Always Heading Home"

Lily Allen – ‘No Shame’ Review

After 2014's patchy 'Sheezus', one of British pop's most distinctive voices rediscovers her sense of self.

Lily Allen’s last album Sheezus wasn’t terrible, but she’s recently admitted she “made a record for the record company” and felt she “couldn’t sell it”. No Shame, which arrives a little over four years later, definitely redresses the balance. It’s a more low-key, vibey album without obvious hit singles which contains some of her most candid songwriting. It’s also consistently gripping and very affecting.

Since Sheezus, Allen has split from Sam Cooper, the father of her kids, and their marriage breakdown dominates No Shame‘s midsection. “Don’t be upset babe, I’ve always said a man can’t own me,” she sings with a shrug of resignation on ‘Your Choice’. The woozy ‘Lost My Mind’ perfectly captures the gnawing torture of watching your phone while waiting on someone to finally get home. Most heartbreaking is ‘Apples’, on which Allen connects her own divorce to that of her parents. “I had to do it baby, we were both depressed,” she sings over a strikingly simple keyboard backing. “There was an end, we were not even having sex.”

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But it would be misleading to call No Shame a break-up album. Allen also confronts her maternal guilt on ‘Three’ and disses a shitty ex-mate on ‘Waste’. As ever, she saves her most lacerating observations for herself. “Anything went, I was famous, I would wake up next to strangers, everyone knows what cocaine does,” she sings on lead single ‘Trigger Bang’, a devastating dissection of her old hard-partying lifestyle. Working with producers including Mark Ronson, Fryars and Bloodpop, Allen couches her confessional lyrics in coolly subdued electro-pop tunes with dancehall and reggae inflections plus a couple of texturising guest raps: Giggs kickstarts ‘Trigger Bang’, rising star Lady Chann lights up ‘Waste’. There’s the odd curveball, too: the swelling piano balladry of ‘Family Man’ almost feels like a modern take on The Carpenters.

Surprisingly but stirringly, No Shame actually concludes with its most upbeat run of tunes. “Eventually you’ll get a piece of that patriarchy pie,” Allen tells her female listeners on ‘Cake’. ‘Pushing Up Daisies’ may be a sweet love song about looking forward to growing old with someone, but Allen still manages to take a jab at Daily Mail readers who “vote for their interests”. And ‘My One’ is a sex-positive bop filled with witty couplets which hark back to her 2006 debut Alright, Still.

By the end, it’s hard to deny No Shame represents the woman who made it: it’s a smart, self-aware and compellingly imperfect record with a pretty unique point of view.

No Shame is out on Jun 8 2018

Kamasi Washington Previews LP 'Heaven and Earth' With Two New Songs

"The Space Travelers Lullaby," new arrangement of "Fists of Fury" theme to appear on jazz saxophonist's follow-up to 2015 album 'The Epic'

Kamasi Washington unveiled two new songs, "The Space Travelers Lullaby" and "Fists of Fury," from his upcoming double-LP, 'Heaven and Earth.'

Jazz saxophonist Kamasi Washington unveiled two new songs, "Fists of Fury" and "The Space Travelers Lullaby," from his forthcoming double-LP, Heaven and Earth, out June 22nd via Young Turks.


Saxophonist/composer on how the troubled state of America inspired Whitney Biennial multimedia piece 'Harmony of Difference'

"The Space Travelers Lullaby" and "Fists of Fury" – which is a new arrangement of the theme song from the class...g-fu movie of the same name – open the album's Heaven and Earth discs, respectively. Washington also shared minute-long videos for each song. The clips are from director Jenn Nkiru's forthcoming film project to accompany Heaven and Earth, expected to arrive later this year.

Washington recorded Heaven and Earth with his band, the Next Step, as well as members of the Los Angeles collective known as the West Coast Get Down. The project's contributors include Thundercat, Terrace Martin, Ronald Bruner, Jr., Cameron Graves, Brandon Coleman, Miles Mosley, Patrice Quinn and Tony Austin. Along with Washington's take on the Fists of Fury theme, Heaven and Earth will also feature his new arrangement of Freddie Hubbard's "Hubtones" and a new song by bandmate Ryan Porter.

Heaven on Earth will be available digitally, as a double CD set and as a four-LP vinyl set housed in a bespoke double gatefold sleeve. The album is available to pre-order.

Washington will embark on an expansive world tour in support of Heaven and Earth this spring and summer. Washington's first North American run launches June 15th in New York City and wraps July 25th in Detroit, while his second leg kicks off October 17th in Seattle and ends November 17th in Atlanta.

Heaven on Earth follows Washington's acclaimed 2015 album, The Epic, as well as his 2017 EP, Harmony of Difference. The latter originally premiered as a multimedia piece at the 2017 Biennial at the Whitney Museum of American Art in New York City. June 22 release date.

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Heaven and Earth Track List

Earth
1. "Fists of Fury"
2. "Can You Hear Him"
3. "Hubtones"
4. "Connections"
5. "Tiffakonkae"
6. "The Invincible Youth"
7. "Testify"
8. "One of One"

Heaven
9. "The Space Travelers Lullaby"
10. "Vi Lua Vi Sol"
11. "Street Fighter Mas"
12. "Song for the Fallen"
13. "Journey"
14. "The Psalmnist"
15. "Show Us the Way"
16. "Will You Sing"

Kamasi Washington Tour Dates

June 15 – New York, NY @ Forest Hills Stadium (with Alt-J)
June 16 – Minneapolis, MN @ Rock the Garden
June 23 – Pasadena, CA @ Arroyo Seco
June 24 – Vancouver, BC @ Queen Elizabeth Theatre
June 25 – Saskatoon, SK @ Saskatchewan Jazz Festival
June 29 – Waitsfield, VT @ Friendly Gathering
June 30 – Montreal, Quebec @ Festival International de Jazz de Montreal
July 12 – Berkeley, CA @ Greek Theater (with Sylvan Esso)
July 25 – Detroit, MI @ Chene Park Amphitheater
October 17 – Seattle, WA @ The Showbox
October 18 – Portland, OR @ Crystal Ballroom
October 19 – San Francisco, CA @ TBA
October 20 – San Luis Obispo, CA @ Fremont Theater
October 22 – Santa Fe, NM @ Meow Wolf
October 24 – Salt Lake City, UT @ The Complex
October 25 – Aspen, CO @ Belly Up
October 26 – Denver, CO @ Ogden Theatre
October 27 – Boulder, CO @ Boulder Theater
October 29 – Kansas City, MO @ The Truman
October 31 – Iowa City, IA @ The Englert Theatre
November 1 – Minneapolis, MN @ TBA
November 2 – Madison, WI @ TBA
November 3 – Chicago, IL @ Riviera Theatre
November 5 – Toronto, CA @ Sony Centre for The Performing Arts
November 7 – Portland, ME @ State Theatre
November 8 – Boston, MA @ Royale
November 9 – Philadelphia, PA @ Electric Factory
November 10 – Washington D.C. @ Lincoln Theatre
November 14 – Richmond, VA @ The National
November 15 – Raleigh, NC @ The Ritz
November 16 – Nashville, TN @ Marathon Music Works
November 17 – Atlanta, GA @ Buckhead Theatre


PREMIERE: SUNKEN – “OVER THE DAYS”

Your dreamy summer romance soundtrack.

Combining sensual vibes with jazz-soaked sounds, South London newcomers Sunken are dropping their debut track “Over The Days”. The perfect soundtrack to lazy evenings spent lying in the warm summer settings, vocalist Poppy Billingham’s voice will transport you to a different planet as she tells the story of a tentative romance and make you feel all the #feels.

“‘Over The Days’ is about the progression of a relationship, the growth of two people together but also their growth as individuals,” she explains. “The song explores the notion of co-dependency within a relationship, learning to be less reliant on one person whilst equally learning to love them unconditionally. It helped me value the importance of appreciating the time spent alone away from your significant other as well as the self-respect that comes from being in a healthy relationship.”

Listen:

https://soundcloud.com/su...r-the-days

Suede Announce New Album The Blue Hour

Anna Gaca // April 30, 2018

Storied English alt-rock band and Britpop pioneers Suede have announced a new studio album, The Blue Hour, out September 21. It will be Suede’s eighth full-length, and it’s presented as the concluding chapter of a triptych that began with their 2013 comeback Bloodsports and continued with 2016’s well-received Night Thoughts. The title refers to “the time of day when the light is fading and night is closing in,” according to the band. The Blue Hour is their first record to be produced by Alan Moulder, known for his work with bands including Nine Inch Nails and the Killers.

To mark the album announcement, Suede frontman Brett Anderson granted an interview with NME that’s full of charmingly Brett Anderson-y quotes like, “I think Suede should be unpleasant, that’s the point of a band like Suede,” and “No one wants to hear about the nice things in life.” His latest songwriting, he says, is inspired in part by imagining the gloomy, fearful “Suedeworld” from the perspective of his young son. According to Anderson, The Blue Hour also incorporates new sonic elements such as a choir, spoken word, and “a lot of field recordings.”

News of Suede’s new album follows just weeks after the publication of Anderson’s memoir, Coal Black Mornings, which chronicles his own youth and the drama-filled early years of the band. Earlier this year, Suede released a box set commemorating the 25th anniversary of their...tled debut.

Below, watch a brief trailer for The Blue Hour and check out the album’s full track list. A reminder for Americans: Find Suede on streaming services as “The London Suede,” the alternative name the band adopted for the U.S. market after a legal run-in with another artist in the ’90s.

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Suede, The Blue Hour track list
1. “As One”
2. “Wastelands”
3. “Mistress”
4. “Beyond the Outskirts”
5. “Chalk Circles”
6. “Cold Hands”
7. “Life Is Golden”
8. “Roadkill”
9. “Tides”
10. “Don’t Be Afraid If Nobody Loves You”
11. “Dead Bird”
12. “All the Wild Places”
13. “The Invisibles”
14. “Flytipping”

Once EP

The South Korea-born, Berlin-based producer is an expert navigator of the balancing act required to make great house music.

To make house music is to walk a fine line between the template and the tangent—between all the things that make house music recognizable as such (the beat, the groove, the repetition) and the things that make a given track stand out across a long, foggy night beneath the disco ball. Peggy Gou has only been putting out music for a couple of years, but the South Korea-born, Berlin-based producer has already proven herself an expert navigator of that balancing act. The best Gou tracks take house music’s familiar form and splash it with color until it’s as splotchy as a tie-dyed piece of fabric. Take “Day Without Yesterday,” from a 2016 12” for London’s Phonica White label. The sound is familiar, with a rippling groove and lush chords that evoke canonical producers like Pépé Bradock and Maurice Fulton. But the sprightly walking bassline and trembling synth chords give the song ample character, ensuring that when you hear it on a dancefloor, mixed in with dozens of songs cut from similar cloth, you’re going to take notice. Likewise, in “Rose,” while her shouted invocations (“Like me! Like you! Like all of us!”) would normally take the spotlight in a club track, they pale alongside the many layers of bright synths and contrasting textures. It’s a clever bit of sleight-of-hand.

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Once is Gou’s first new release in nearly a year and a half, and its three tracks mark a significant step forward. For one thing, this is the first time she’s sung on a record: On “It Makes You Forget (Itgehane),” the standout, she oscillates between murmuring and actual singing, and she sounds great. The spoken-word bits lie low in the mix, which has the effect of pulling the listener down to their level. (That she’s singing in Korean only adds an element of intrigue for anyone who doesn’t speak the language.) On the chorus, she adopts a lilting cadence that’s reminiscent of Brazilian popular music; her voice isn’t powerful, but she uses it well, and her sparingly multi-tracked harmonies add dusty color to a track that’s already bursting with vibraphones, jazz-inflected keyboards, and a squelchy hint of acid.

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“Hundres Times” loses the vocals and digs into a clubbier, heads-down groove. The drums push forward with the intensity of a 1990s Prescription Records classic, while the track’s tonal center is a loose weave of elastic synth sounds and flickering accents. The arrangement is a model for how to keep things dynamic, teasing individual elements in and out of the mix. Gou’s longstanding fondness for Detroit is evident in the tune’s big, dramatic synth sweeps, and on the closing “Han Jan,” she flips her Motor City instincts into a springy electro jam. Electro is enjoying one of its periodic comebacks right now, with syncopated 808s adding rhythmic spice to many dancefloors more accustomed to house music’s four-on-the-floor thump. But “Han Jan” skips the sci-fi affect of so much contemporary electro and instead reconnects with the genre’s funk roots.

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Reply #37 posted 05/29/18 7:53am

JoeBala

Florence & the Machine Announce North American Tour Dates

Florence + the Machine, whose fourth studio album “High as Hope” is out June 29, have announced dates for a 23-city North American fall headlining tour. The tour, which is produced by Live Nation, launches August 5 in Montreal and including stops at Los Angeles’ Hollywood Bowl and New York’s Barclays Center, as well as Seattle, Portland, Nashville, Washington, D.C., Philadelphia, Chicago and more. Full dates appear below.

Support acts at various dates include St. Vincent, Kamasi Washington, Billie Eilish, Beth Ditto, Grizzly Bear, Perfume Genius and Wet.

Tickets are on sale to the general public beginning Friday, June 1 at 10 a.m. local time . American Express Card Members can purchase tickets for select dates before the general public beginning Tuesday, May 29 at 12 p.m. local time, through Thursday, May 31 at 10 p.m. local time.

“High as Hope” was entirely written by frontwoman Florence Welch, and marked her first time co-producing (alongside Emile Haynie) one of her band’s albums. It features contributions from Kamasi Washington, Sampha, Tobias Jesso Jr, Kelsey Lu and Jamie xx—is out June 29 on Republic Records. Watch the A.G. Rojas-directed video for first official single “Hunger” here.

FLORENCE + THE MACHINE LIVE

August 5 Montreal, QC, Canada Osheaga^
August 9 Lake Tahoe, NV Lake Tahoe Outdoor Arena at Harveys*+

August 11 San Francisco, CA Outside Lands^

September 8 Vancouver, BC, Canada Skookum Festival^

September 10 Seattle, WA KeyArena†

September 11 Portland, OR Moda Center†

September 14 Salt Lake City, UT Maverik Center†

September 15 Denver, CO Grandoozy Festival^

September 22 Las Vegas, NV Life Is Beautiful^

September 23 San Diego, CA Viejas Arena at Aztec Bowl San Diego State University‡

September 25 Los Angeles, CA Hollywood Bowl‡

September 29 Dallas, TX The Pavilion at Toyota Music Factory‡

September 30 Houston, TX The Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion‡

October 2 Nashville, TN Bridgestone Arena§

October 3 Charlotte, NC Spectrum Center§

October 5 Washington, D.C. The Anthem**+

October 9 New York, NY Barclays Center

October 12 Boston, MA TD Garden

October 13 Uncasville, CT Mohegan Sun Arena††

October 14 Philadelphia, PA Wells Fargo Center††

October 16 Toronto, ON, Canada Air Canada Centre††

October 19 Chicago, IL United Center‡‡

October 20 Minneapolis, MN Target Center‡‡

*with Wet

†with St. Vincent and Lizzo

‡with Kamasi Washington

  • with Billie Eilish

**with Beth Ditto

††with Grizzly Bear

‡‡with Perfume Genius

Ray LaMontagne onstageEXPAND
Ray LaMontagne onstage
Photo courtesy RCA Records

Ray LaMontagne on Being Part of the Light and Staying Positive Through Dark Times

Earlier this month, Ray LaMontagne released his seventh studio album, Part of the Light. Comprising just nine tracks and clocking in at 46 minutes, there’s not an ounce of fat on it.

The singer-songwriter's voice alternates between soaring as high as ever on “As Black As Blood Is Blue” and cozying up in your eardrum on “Let’s Make It Last," boasting quite a bit of range despite the record's brevity.

Ahead of his visit to Houston in early June, LaMontagne spoke with the Houston Press about his new album and his quest to bring some positivity to the world during these bleak times.

“It just feels like the world is so ugly,” he says. “Not all of it of course, but you don’t have to look too far.”

LaMontagne doesn’t watch the news. He says he checks in every few weeks to stay abreast of developments in the world, but the overwhelming negativity of it all has caused him to turn inward.

“I turn these things off because I can’t handle it,” he says. “I feel like all I can do, personally, is try to be a part of something positive every day.”

Instead of spending time his days attached to his phone or computer, LaMontagne immerses himself in life, avoiding online interactions and focusing on his real-world relationships: his family, his friends and strangers he interacts with in person.

“A lot of these songs are me talking to myself, trying to focus on how beautiful life is,” he says. “Because we really just have this moment, so I just want to be present for it.”

Every track on Part of the Light feels personal, but “It’s Always Been You," which he wrote for his wife of 29 years, sounds especially intimate.

“We’ve known each other since we were eight,” LaMontagne says. “There’s this feeling that somehow our souls have known each other forever, before there was anything, and I think I was trying to express that in the song.”

Image result for Ray LaMontagne Part Of The Light

The New Hampshire native says his latest album is no more or less different than any of his others, even though it was recorded in his home studio.

“It’s nice to be able to wake up, make a cup of coffee and walk straight into the studio. To wake up in your own bed and be three steps from the studio, but… every batch of songs is different,” he says. “Albums are like paintings. I paint them then I walk away and start thinking about the next thing.”

Speaking of the next thing, LaMontagne may be weary of the world but he doesn’t think things will be bleak forever.

“The pendulum always swings to one extreme before it goes the other way," he says. "It feels like maybe we’re just hitting that extreme and it’s going to go the other way with this next generation of kids."

And while the singer-songwriter admits that there are many factors contributing to the ills of American culture, he attributes at least some of it to social media specifically.

“I think social media is making people feel so isolated,” LaMontagne says. “It makes people feel like they’re not good enough, like they don’t have real friendships. It gives a whole platform to ugliness, for people to be cruel to one another because they’re not looking at them.

"Would you look someone in the eye and say, 'You’re fat' or 'You’re ugly'? You would never say that to somebody. But online, people say it every day. And worse and worse, because they’re not seeing that this is hurting somebody. It’s a cultural illness," he continues. "I have no answers, absolutely none other than that I don’t participate personally because I don’t want to be a part of it. It’s gross."

He's hopeful for change but, in the interim, plans to prioritize the things in his life he can positively impact.

“I focus on the things that are real and tangible: Real friendships, real connections, real conversations,” he says. “And I just hope the pendulum is going to go in the other direction for the next generation of kids.”

Ray LaMontange and Neko Case are scheduled to perform at 7:30 p.m. (doors open) on June 10 at Smart Financial Centre 18111 Lexington, Sugar Land. For more information, call 281 207-6278 or visit ticketmaster.com, $59-$89.

Morrissey just announced more UK tour dates for summer 2018

After announcing details of a pair of homecoming shows at Manch...field Bowl, the former Smiths turned solo star will now also be playing July shows in Edinburgh, Portsmouth and Reading.

Tickets to the newly anno...ble here.

Wed July 04 2018 – EDINBURGH Usher Hall
Sat July 07 2018 – MANCHESTER Castlefield Bowl – Manchester
Sun July 08 2018 – MANCHESTER Castlefield Bowl – Manchester
Tue July 10 2018 – PORTSMOUTH Guildhall
Thu July 12 2018 – READING Rivermead

In support of his latest album ‘Low In High School‘, Morrissey’s tour last year made headlines when it was reported that Glasgow fans allegedly le...Sturgeon. Morrissey later denied the accusations, asserting that “not one person was known to have left the venue in protest”.

Meanwhile, last week saw the singer announce details of a sp... Lads Club – which featured in iconic Smiths photos from ‘The Queen Is Dead’ era.

The event will provide “some exclusive content as well as being able to view the club and its Smiths room. Vegetarian food will be provided by The Deli-Lama”.

The event will be hosted between 10.30am and 4.40pm at the club on both the singer’s dates on July 7 and 8. Admission is free.

R.I.P. Stewart Lupton, Jonathan Fire*Eater frontman has died at 43

ON MAY 28, 2018, 9:29PM
Jonathan Fire*Eater's Stewart Lupton Dead At 43

Much of Jonathan Fire*Eater’s story is chronicled in Lizzy Goodman’s fantastic NYC alt-rock oral history, Meet Me in the Bathroom.

Associate Staff Writer


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Reply #38 posted 05/29/18 9:37am

JoeBala

Liberace and Friends

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Reply #39 posted 05/30/18 6:12am

Identity




The Rolling Stones Play “Wild Horses” with Florence Welch in London



Florence Welch, the howling, bazooka-voiced star behind Florence + The Machine, has performed with the Rolling Stones once before. In November 2012, she joined them onstage at London’s O2 Arena to sing “Gimme Shelter” with Mick Jagger. And last night, she did it again, joining the band during their concert at the London Stadium to sing “Wild Horses.”



Florence + The Machine had opened the show earlier in the night, taking over for Liam Gallagher, who opened the last London show on Tuesday. And when Florence took the stage later to perform with the Stones, she brought all of her million-megawatt stage presence to bear, singing “Wild Horses” with Mick Jagger as an intense, impassioned duet.

Source: Spin.com

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Reply #40 posted 05/30/18 7:23am

JoeBala

Two Thousand Miles I Roamed: Otis Redding's 'Dock of the Bay Sessions'

TWELVE PREVIOUSLY RELEASED TRACKS FROM OTIS REDDING'S FINAL RECORDING SESSIONS HANG TOGETHER BEAUTIFULLY AS A POSTHUMOUS MASTERPIECE.

DOCK OF THE BAY SESSIONS
OTIS REDDING

Rhino

18 May 2018

In 1967, Otis Redding was riding an artistic and commercial high. His show-stopping performance at the Monterey Pop Festival – backed by Booker T. & the MG's - defined him as a singer and showman to be reckoned with and introduced him to more mainstream pop and rock audiences. Earlier that year he released King & Queen, an album of duets with Carla Thomas, as well as a fiery live album, Live in Europe, recorded at the Olympia Theatre in Paris. Near the end of that busy year, he recorded – among other songs - one of his most beloved singles, "(Sittin' on) The Dock of the Bay", at Stax Studios in Memphis, Tennessee. Days later, his life was cut short when he died in a plane crash on December 10. Otis Redding was 26 years old.

It goes without saying that Redding had plenty more music to give the world. The sessions that yielded "(Sittin' on) The Dock of the Bay" included a total of 12 songs that ran the gamut from soulful ballads to sturdy funk rockers to traditional gospel. Who knows what else he could have come up with into his 30s, 40s and beyond.

The songs recorded during these sessions all eventually made their way into the world as singles and fodder for countless compilations and boxed sets (including the title track, which was a posthumous single that reached #1 on the pop and R&B; charts the following year). As a result, Rhino's latest Otis Redding album, Dock of the Bay Sessions, offers no unreleased music and certainly no hard-to-find soul nuggets for die-hards (nor does it claim to). Instead, the 12-track single album – available on CD, 180-gram vinyl, or digital download - is a glimpse of what might have been Redding's next album had he survived into 1968 and beyond.

By that measure alone, Dock of the Bay Sessions is a worthy addition to any classic soul fan's collection. The album works amazingly well as a concise snapshot of late 1967 Otis Redding. Not only was he an accomplished vocalist – grittier than Sam Cooke but without most of Wilson Pickett's macho bravado – but the songs, many co-written by ace session guitarist Steve Cropper – fit into a variety of styles that never sound forced.

The title track, which opens Dock of the Bay Sessions, shows a constantly maturing Redding tempering his soul groove with a gentle, almost folk-like demeanor. Cropper's guitar leads mesh beautifully with Redding's voice and the sound effects of seagulls and water lapping up on the shore become a natural element of the song and never gimmicky. Redding is in a reflective, almost Zen-like mood ("Watching the ships roll in / And then I watch 'em roll away again") but aware of his struggles ("I can't do what ten people tell me to do"). As a ubiquitous soul classic, it's easy to take it for granted. From a songwriting and performing perspective, it's deeper and more layered than nearly all its contemporaries.

Throughout Dock of the Bay Sessions, Redding – who either wrote or co-wrote all 12 songs, with the exception of the gospel standard "Amen", which he arranged – tries on a variety of musical moods like a clothes-horse let loose in an ample closet. Fortunately, he essentially nails every style. There's the breathless funk-rock of "Love Man", bolstered by the propulsive drumming of Al Jackson, Jr. The easy swagger of "Hard to Handle", revived decades later by the Black Crowes (who gave it an energetic, classic rock makeover), has Redding in a lusty mood. "Boys will come along a dime by the dozen," he tells his love interest, "That ain't nothin' but ten-cent lovin'." His assurances then come tumbling down in almost rap-like cadence: "Hey little thing let me light your candle / Cause mama I'm sure hard to handle now, yessir'am."

Anyone who's heard earlier Redding classics like "Pain in My Heart" and "I've Been Loving You Too Long" knows that Redding excels at heart-tugging ballads, and Dock of the Bay Sessions provides some fantastic examples of the genre. "I've Got Dreams to Remember" (co-written by Redding's wife Zelma, based on a poem she wrote) is one of the most emotionally anguished three minutes Redding ever committed to tape. "I know you said he was just a friend," he sings through the tears, "But I saw him kiss you again and again." Backup vocalists and Booker T. Jones' simmering Hammond organ help push the song into an even more emotionally rich territory. "Gone Again" is one of Redding's lesser-known ballads, but is certainly no less effective. Devastated by a breakup, Redding's world is shattered. "I walked in the forest," he sings, "Didn't see no trees / Go to sleep at night / With a cold wind of breeze." The horns pack an additional punch as if underscoring Redding's heartbreak.

Equally adept at both energetic funk and heart-on-sleeve slow jams, Redding finds a happy medium somewhere between the two on songs like "Direct Me", a gritty mid-tempo track featuring some of Cropper's best guitar work and an overall atmosphere that seems to predict mid-'70s era Stevie Wonder. The sunny shuffle "I'm a Changed Man" shows Redding basking in the glow of love with plenty of trademark Otis riffing and even some good-natured scatting.

Redding gets back to his gospel roots in the closing number, a priceless take on the classic "Amen," as if to remind the world that he can tackle any style with effortless grace. These sessions can sometimes be a difficult listen when you realize that Redding was less than a month away from his untimely passing when the songs were recorded. Like Sam Cooke – an artist to whom he was often compared – Otis Redding died way too soon with a seemingly unlimited reservoir of talent and skill. Dock of the Bay Sessions may not reveal anything new in the Redding catalog, and it's hardly a comprehensive career overview, but it's a warm reminder of his ample talents and a collection of songs that deserves to be in everyone's collection.

Dock of the Bay Sessions will be issued on vinyl and CD on 18 May 2018.

Nilüfer Yanya's "Thanks 4 Nothing" Video and US Live Debut Photos

PROMISING BRITISH MUSICIAN NILÜFER YANYA MADE HER US DEBUT AT THE MERCURY LOUNGE IN NEW YORK CITY LAST YEAR AND HER NEW VIDEO CAME OUT YESTERDAY.

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Nilüfer Yanya made her US debut in New York a couple of months ago following the release of "Baby Luv", her first track for ATO Records. Yesterday, Yanya released the fever dream of a video for her lovely song, "Thanks 4 Nothing", her first single of 2018. "The video was directed by new creative duo ENERGYFORCE, who helped Nilüfer realize her vision of recreating a cult, existing within the aesthetic of a classic indie film. Nilüfer explains, "we wanted to make The Handmaid's Tale meets Pulp Fiction. It carries a strong outdated '70s vibe with occult twists where nothing goes according to plan, and nothing really happens. This echoes both the current political climate and the inner failings of a relationship, both cult-like in their way and blindly following one another, shot on 16mm film for that cinematic effect."

Yanya is a promising musician who has received a lot of buzz for her reflective, soulful guitar songs from The Guardian, Vice, The Independent, and several other sites. The London-based artist performed for an intimate audience in New York and the show included Xhosa opening the night and Jazzi Bobbi joining Yanya with her saxophone. Though Yanya had only officially released a handful of tracks at the time, it was impressive to catch her live as she played a strong set. Yanya offered PopMatters a chance to learn a little more about her as she dove right into our 20 Questions. Read her responses and then find some clips and photos from her NYC gig below.

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1. The latest book or movie that made you cry?

The new Blue Planet ep.1

2. The fictional character most like you?

Midnight - Jacqueline Wilson

3. The greatest album, ever?

I don't think I've discovered it yet.

4. Star Trek or Star Wars?

Neither.

5. Your ideal brain food?

Carrot salad!

6. You're proud of this accomplishment, but why?

Going vegan nearly two years ago. Because I wanna save the planet.

7. You want to be remembered for ...?

Being a decent person.

8. Of those who've come before, the most inspirational are?

Dinosaurs.

9. The creative masterpiece you wish bore your signature?

Victoria directed by Sebastian Schipper.

10. Your hidden talents . . .?

Sewing.

11. The best piece of advice you actually followed?

To look at people's actions, not what they say.

12. The best thing you ever bought, stole, or borrowed?

An eye mask. Lol. Genuinely best £2 investment of my life.

13. You feel best in Armani or Levis or…?

Two-piece suit.

14. Your dinner guest at the Ritz would be?

I don't think I'd ever end up at the Ritz.

15. Time travel: where, when and why?

Would be great to have seen earth before human life.

16. Stress management: hit man, spa vacation or Prozac?

Spa.

17. Essential to life: coffee, vodka, cigarettes, chocolate, or..?

Water.

18. Environ of choice: city or country, and where on the map?

Right now I just want to go back to New York!

19. What do you want to say to the leader of your country?

Hand in your notice.

20. Last but certainly not least, what are you working on, now?

My first album.

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...sx1cOjydBA

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https://www.youtube.com/w...8V4NFg4UB8

Johnny Cash Poems, Lyrics Set to Music in Multi-artist 'Forever Words' Album

Los Angeles Times (TNS)

FOREVER WORDS BRINGS TOGETHER ACROSS 16 TRACKS A REMARKABLY DIVERSE GATHERING OF ARTISTS, FROM PEERS AND CLOSE FRIENDS KRIS KRISTOFFERSON AND WILLIE NELSON TO FAMILY MEMBERS INCLUDING ROSANNE CASH AND CARLENE CARTER.

HENDERSONVILLE, Tenn. — John Carter Cash is an imposing yet reposeful presence as he leans his 6-foot-21/2 frame against one of the rough-hewn lumber beams supporting the porch roof of the Cash family cabin in a rural town 30 miles north of Nashville.

He nods toward a woodsy knoll a few yards away and points out where deer can often be seen grazing on the other side of a fence between the cabin and the lake that long was a favorite respite for his celebrated parents, Johnny Cash and June Carter Cash. The cabin also houses a recording studio that both Johnny and June used until their deaths in 2003.

"This was his place to get away, back in the day," said Cash, the only son of one of country music's most beloved couples. "It's home," he said softly. "We're always doing one thing or another here."

Among the latest products out of the rustic cabin is the exceptional new album "Forever Words." On it a stellar array of country, rock and pop stars pay homage to the Man in Black by creating new songs setting many of his unpublished poems and lyrics to music for the first time.

The project brings together across 16 tracks a remarkably diverse gathering of artists, from peers and close friends Kris Kristofferson and Willie Nelson to family members including Rosanne Cash and Carlene Carter.

Disciples and admirers such as Elvis Costello, the late Chris Cornell, Brad Paisley, Alison Krauss & Union Station, superstar producer-singer-songwriter T Bone Burnett, Kacey Musgraves, John Mellencamp, jazz pianist-hip-hip artist Robert Glasper, bluegrass duo Dailey & Vincent, country maverick Jamey Johnson and freshly minted roots music trio I'm With Her are also showcased, among others.

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It's an aural companion to the book "Forever Words: The Unknown Poems" published in 2016 and edited by Paul Muldoon, the 2003 Pulitzer Prize winner for poetry. Several but not all of the songs on the "Forever Words" album, which John Carter Cash produced with Steve Berkowitz, draw on Johnny Cash's writings that also appeared in the book. The album is due April 6.

"When anything new from Johnny Cash comes out, I always want for that endeavor to be something I believe he would have liked to have seen released," said Cash, who has overseen several posthumous projects over the last 15 years. "I also want it to be something I feel, and the folks I worked with on whatever project it is feel, is viable and unique in its own right."

The "Forever Words" album would seem to fill the bill on both fronts. The poems and lyrics newly put into song span virtually his entire life, from "What Would I Dreamer Do?," an undated work that John Carter Cash estimates his father wrote at age 13 or 14, to "Forever," which he wrote in summer 2003, just a few weeks before his death at age 71.

Another of the earliest works recorded for the album is "The Captain's Daughter," which was written when Cash was 19 or 20 and which Krauss and her band chose to record.

"There were a whole bunch of lyrics Johnny Cash had written, it's a huge book," Krauss said in a separate interview last year not long after their session at the Cash Cabin, where many of the tracks were recorded. "His son has the book, and he's had people write melodies for them. What I've heard so far is amazing. We did a track for that and had Robert Lee Castleman write the melody for that — oh, gosh, it's just beautiful. So that was fun."

Cornell chose "You Never Knew My Mind," a piece Cash wrote in 1967 around the time he divorced his first wife and mother of their four children, Vivian Liberto, before he and June Carter married the following year.

Cornell also experienced the dissolution of a marriage (to first wife Susan Silver), something that John Carter Cash said came through in his setting of his father's lyrics. Long before Cash recorded his lauded version of Cornell's song "Rusty Cage" on his 1996 album "Unchained" with producer Rick Rubin during his late-in-life career renaissance, Cornell was a Cash fan.

"When Johnny Cash covered 'Rusty Cage,' it was the first time I received compliments (about) my lyrics," Cornell said several years ago to the Hartford Courant. That was because, he suggested, "You can't always make out the words I sing with Soundgarden."

"I knew he was one of my dad's favorites within the music industry," said Cash. "He respected my father as much as anyone in that realm of music, so I knew he'd be part of it. He told me backstage in mid-1990s how much he loved my dad."

The song delves into the heartbreak of people who grow apart: "You didn't see me well enough to recognize the signs/ You didn't want to know it's over/ You never looked close enough to know/ You never knew my mind."

"It took him (Cornell) a long time to come back with the original demo of 'You Never Knew My Mind'," Cash said. "It laid me down when I first heard it because it connected so deeply with his own pain and angst and honesty … . But his whole body of work is about connecting with the pain. He was in a really good space when he wrote that song. It still lays me down and brings me near to tears when I hear it and sometimes takes me all the way there."

Cash also approached songwriter Ruston Kelly, with whom he'd written songs previously. "I asked him, 'Would you be interested in looking at this book and finding something you could put melody and music to?' He nearly cried in my face. He told me, 'When I was a teenager, someone had published a handwritten lyric your father wrote to your mother, and I started trying to put some music to it but never finished it. I just recently finished it for my fiancee.'"

"I said, 'Who's your fiancee?' and he said, 'Kacey Musgraves,'" with whom Kelly recorded that song, "To June This Morning."

"It's all been very organic," Cash said, "that kind of serendipity that I couldn't have created if I tried."

There's a measure of pride in Cash's voice when he talks about the broad range of artists involved.

"Creatively, it had to go there because Dad's writing was so diverse. With some lyrics or poems, as I looked at them I realized, 'This would work perfect for a country artist' or 'this ties in with bluegrass-gospel' or 'this is gut-wrenching and powerful and could be for a hard-rock artist singing a heavy ballad,' or 'This would work with hip-hop.' It's that diverse."

The album begins with an instrumental arrangement of one of Cash's earliest songs, "I Still Miss Someone," which he wrote with nephew Roy Cash Jr., and it segues into "Forever," recited by Kristofferson and Nelson and serving as a guiding principle for the whole album.

"After my mother's passing," Cash said, "within a notebook filled with very lonesome love letters to her, words of agony, were these words of hope, this stanza that represents the fact that he saw beyond the pain he felt. The beauty that remained in his heart at that time is something we could all retain."

"Forever" is exceptionally concise, and all the more powerful for its brevity: "You tell me that I must perish/ like the flowers that I cherish/ Nothing remaining of my name/ nothing remembered of my fame/ But the trees that I planted still are young/ The songs I sang will still be sung."

"The love people have for my father's music has not diminished," Cash said, "it has only grown. I firmly believe it's because of his integrity as a human being, as a person — and just that he had a great heart.

"To me, that's the reason it's endured, the reason he still connects with people from so many different walks of life: because he was real. He was honest. And anything we put out now, it has to be honest.

"If it's not honest," he said, "it's not Johnny Cash."

MAY 30, 2018 4:48AM PT

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JoeBala

Jeff Goldblum to Release Debut Jazz Album on Decca Records

Jeff Goldblum is set to record his first jazz album after having signed up with Decca RecordsLabel Group, Decca announced Wednesday. The actor’s jazz piano skills caught the attention of Decca executives after he accompanied soul-jazz singer Gregory Porter on a rendition of Nat King Cole’s “Mona Lisa” on BBC talk show “The Graham Norton Show” last October while promoting “Thor: Ragnarok.”

“I’m so happy to be in cahoots with the wonderful people at Decca, one of the coolest and most prestigious labels of all time,” Goldblum said.

The actor, known around the world for his iconic roles in films including “The Fly,” “Jurassic Park” and “Independence Day,” has played piano since childhood. He regularly plays with his jazz band, The Mildred Snitzer Orchestra, around L.A. and at the Café Carlyle in New York. Goldblum also hosts a weekly jazz variety show at L.A.’s Rockwell Table and Stage when not away on location.

Tom Lewis, director of A&R for Decca, said he believed bringing Goldblum’s music to a wider audience would “be helping, in our own small way, to make the world a happier place.”

“We are delighted to welcome him to Decca,” Lewis said. “He’s a fantastic jazz pianist, a great band leader and just about the loveliest man in the world. His love of jazz is infectious and whenever he plays he makes you feel very happy.”

Further details on the debut album are yet to be announced. Goldblum is currently promoting the upcoming “Jurassic World: Fallen Kingdom” around the world ahead of its international launch next week, including another appearance on “The Graham Norton Show” in Britain last Friday. Goldblum reprises his fan-favorite character Ian Malcolm in the blockbuster franchise, which he last played in 1997’s “The Lost World: Jurassic Park.”

Goldblum recently voiced the character of Duke in regular collaborator Wes Anderson’s stop-motion animation “Isle of Dogs,” which is continuing its global rollout. Other upcoming films include Drew Pearce’s “Hotel Artemis,” which opens in the U.S. on June 8, and Rick Alverson’s “The Mountain,” which is currently in post-production.

Lady Gaga Returns To The Recording Studio With Jazz Legend Tony Bennett

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Mike Nied | May 29, 2018 1:23 pm

It looks like a sequel to Cheek To Cheek is on the way. Lady Gagaand the legendary Tony Bennett dominated the charts with their collaborative jazz album in 2014. After topping the Billboard 200 they picked up a Grammy in the Best Traditional Pop Vocal Album category and embarked upon a joint tour in 2015. Now it looks as though the pair are getting ready to replicate the feat. Yesterday (May 28), they linked up at New York City’s Electric Lady Studio. Photos emerged online, sending fans into a frenzy as they speculated what was going on. Although it is unclear what they were working on, it seems safe to assume that some sort of collaboration is on the way.

Gaga’s expected return to jazz is another exciting project to look forward to. The second half of 2018 is shaping up to be action packed for the superstar. She is set to contribute new music and appear on the big screen alongside Bradley Cooper in a remake of A Star Is Born. The project is scheduled to drop in October. After wrapping up promotion on the film, she will launch her Las Vegas residency in December. She is also putting in work on another solo studio album. We don’t know much about the project just yet. However, it seems like the siren is aiming to return to her pop roots after dabbling in Americana on 2016’s Joanne.

She has already reunited with BloodPop (Joanne) and DJ White Shadow (“Born This Way,” “Applause” and “The Cure”) in the studio. German producer Boys Noize signed on for the project and allegedly delivered “beautiful weirdness” in their session together. Also keep an eye peeled for a potential Katy Perry duet. The Witness diva listed Mother Monster as a dream collaborator during an interview on American Idol this spring. Reuniting with Tony Bennett only adds to the excitement and makes it clear Gaga is gunning for a massive return to the scene. Check out the evidence below!

Lady Gaga

NEWS

George Michael / Listen Without Prejudice Vol 1 / single CD remaster

Plus news on UK premiere of the Director’s Cut of the Freedom doc

A single CD remaster of George Michael‘s Listen Without Prejudice Vol 1 will be released next month.

When the 1990 album was reissued in October last year, it was available as a four-disc super deluxe, a two-CD deluxe (with MTV Unplugged) and on vinyl – there was no single CD option. This has now changed, and we will wait to see which of the three cover options Sony use –the ill-advised cropped version (used on the box set), sunglasses headshot (used on 2CD), or original cover. The image uploaded to the various retail vendors suggests the latter.

The one-disc version is certainly cheap, although it’s debatable whether – without any bonus material on offer – you ‘need’ the remaster, which to these ears didn’t sound dramatically different.

In related news, the new ‘Director’s Cut’ version of the George Michael: Freedom film (read the SDE review) will receive its UK premiere at the Edinburgh Film Festival. According to George’s friend and manager David Austin, this longer 113 minute cut was effectively the original version of the film that the the two of them were happy with, before they had to compromise and trim it to around 90 minutes for TV.

This single CD remaster of Listen Without Prejudice Vol 1. is released on June 2018.

Kick 30 / 3CD+Blu-ray deluxe edition

CD 1 – ORIGINAL ALBUM REMASTERED
1. Guns In The Sky
2. New Sensation
3. Devil Inside
4. Need You Tonight
5. Mediate
6. The Loved One
7. Wild Life
8. Never Tear Us Apart
9. Mystify
10. Kick
11. Calling All Nations
12. Tiny Daggers

CD2 – DEMOS, MIXES & MORE
1. Move On [Guitar Version]
2. I’m Coming (Home)
3. Mediate [Live From America]
4. Never Tear Us Apart [Live From America]
5. Kick [Live From America]
6. On The Rocks
7. Do Wot You Do
8. Mystify [Chicago Demo]
9. Jesus Was A Man [Demo]
10. The Trap [Demo]
11. Guns In The Sky [Kick Ass Remix]
12. Need You Tonight [Mendelsohn Extended Mix]
13. Move On

CD3 – ADDITIONAL MIXES & B-SIDES
(tracks in bold, new additions compared to KICK 25)

1. Never Tear Us Apart [Soul Version]
2. New Sensation [Nick 12” Mix]
3. New Sensation [Nick 7” Mix]
4. Devil Inside [Extended Remix]
5. Devil Inside [7” Version]
6. Devil Inside [Radio Edit]
7. Different World [12” Version]
8. Different World [7” Version]
9. Need You Tonight [Big Bump Mix]
10. Need You Tonight [Ben Liebrand Mix]
11. Need You Tonight [Mendelsohn 7″ Edit]
12. Guns in the Sky [Kookaburra Mix]
13. Calling All Nations [Kids On Bridges Remix]
14. Shine Like it Does [Live]

BLU-RAY
1. Kick Mixed in Dolby Atmos & High Definition Audio
2. Promo Videos
Guns In The Sky
New Sensation
Devil Inside
Need You Tonight
Mediate
Never Tear Us Apart
Mystify
Kick [New 2017 promo]

Kick 30 / 2LP half-speed mastered vinyl

Side A
1 Guns in the Sky
2 New Sensation
3 Devil Inside

Side B
1 Need You Tonight
2 Mediate
3 The Loved One

Side C
1 Wild Life
2 Never Tear Us Apart
3 Mystify

Side D
1 Kick
2 Calling All Nations
3 Tiny Daggers

Def Leppard / Vinyl and CD Collections / Volume one: The Eighties

Eighties output remastered • CD and vinyl boxes • Rarities disc

In June, Universal Music will issue a new Def Leppard albums box set which will be available on CD and vinyl. It’s the first of four planned volumes which will cover the band’s complete recorded output

Vinyl Collection Volume 1 (and CD Collection Volume 1) contains the band’s eighties output: their first four albums, Live at the LA Forum 1983 and a disc of rarities.

Additionally, the vinyl set will include a recreation of the band’s first EP The Def Leppard EP which contains three songs recorded in 1978. This was issued in January 1979, 15 months before debut album On Through The Night was released. Interestingly, the CD box includes the same content on a three-inch CD single – nice!

The audio was re-mastered by Ronan McHugh and Joe Elliott at Joe’s Garage, and the vinyl LPs were cut by Greg Moore. Both vinyl and CD sets feature a hardcover book with photos by Ross Halfin and notes by Paul Elliott.

The Vinyl and CD Collections Volume 1 will be released on 1 June 2018.

ConFunkShun takes all the "Ffun" live on new disc

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Reply #42 posted 05/30/18 7:33am

JoeBala

Glenn Snoddy, 96, Accidental Inventor of the Fuzz Tone, Dies

The recording engineer Glenn Snoddy in an undated family photo. Not long after he inadvertently produced the sound that became known as the fuzz tone, there were “fuzz tones all over the place,” he said.

By Bill Friskics-Warren

  • May 25, 2018

Glenn Snoddy, the studio engineer who was at the controls for the historic Nashville recording session that inadvertently produced the sound that became known as the fuzz tone, died on May 21 at his home in Murfreesboro, Tenn. He was 96.

His death was confirmed by his daughter Dianne Mayo.

Though typically associated with ’60s rock — and maybe most famously with Keith Richards’s fat, buzzing guitar riff on the Rolling Stones’ 1965 hit “(I Can’t Get No) Satisfaction” — the fuzz tone emerged from the studio session that produced the country singer Marty Robbins’s otherwise euphonious 1961 single “Don’t Worry.”

A malfunction in the console through which the playing of the electric bass guitarist Grady Martin was being transmitted caused the original fuzz-tone effect, Mr. Snoddy said in a video made by the National Association of Music Merchants in 2014.

Image result for Glenn Snoddy

The low, reverberant sound produced by Mr. Martin’s bass on “Don’t Worry,” which reached the country Top 10, was reminiscent of a rumbling car muffler.

Overriding the objections of Mr. Martin, who felt that another take was needed to fix what he considered an unwelcome sonic intrusion, Mr. Snoddy and Don Law, the session’s producer, believed they had a unique sound on their hands and decided to leave their putatively flawed recording intact.

Their instincts paid off, especially after Mr. Snoddy designed a device that could reproduce a fuzz tone on demand.

Image result for Glenn Snoddy

“It was several weeks, or maybe months, later that the industry picked up on this and they had fuzz tones all over the place,” Mr. Snoddy said in the 2014 video.

The resulting piece of equipment — a preamp commonly known as a fuzz box that was sold by the Gibson guitar company, for which Mr. Snoddy received royalties — allowed guitarists to change the tone of their instrument from clean to dirty with the tap of a foot pedal.

Image result for Glenn Snoddy
Maestro Fuzz-Tone FZ-1. Demonstration Record 1962.CreditVideo by Adrian Täckman

Before long the fuzz tone had become a hallmark of ’60s guitar rock, especially among its more psychedelic exponents, like the Jimi Hendrix Experience and Cream. Loud and arresting, the fuzz tone was well suited to expressions of rock’s more disruptive and rebellious impulses.

Even without his association with the fuzz tone, Mr. Snoddy’s career as a recording engineer, including his work on landmark recordings by Patsy Cline and Johnny Cash, would have secured his place as a shaper of the Nashville Sound of the 1950s and ’60s.

Image
A 1966 Gibson Maestro Fuzz Tone.

His efforts to start a Nashville chapter of the Recording Academy, for which he served as branch president in 1973 and 1974, likewise secured his place in the music industry at large.

Glenn Thomas Snoddy was born on May 4, 1922, in Shelbyville, Tenn., one of two sons of Julius and Gaynelle (Searcy) Snoddy. His mother was a homemaker, and his father, who died when Glenn was 12, worked as a postal carrier and served as the song leader at his local church.

Mr. Snoddy learned to play trombone and piano at an early age but ultimately pursued a career as a recording engineer after being introduced to radio technology while serving in the Army during World War II.

Upon returning home after the war, he worked as an audio engineer at radio stations in Tennessee before taking a job at WSM, where he began engineering broadcasts of the Grand Ole Opry, as well as swing bands and gospel revues, in 1955.

In 1960 Mr. Snoddy became an engineer at the producer Owen Bradley’s famous Quonset Hut studio, where he created the first stereo recording console in Nashville and worked on projects featuring artists like Flatt & Scruggs and Ray Price. He also hired a scuffling young Kris Kristofferson to work as the studio’s custodian.

Image result for Glenn Snoddy

In 1967 Mr. Snoddy opened Woodland Sound in a refurbished movie theater in the Five Points neighborhood of East Nashville. He quickly established it as one of the city’s premier recording studios. By the time he retired, in 1990, Woodland had become the site of some well-known recordings, including the Nitty Gritty Dirt Band’s “Will the Circle Be Unbroken,” a 1972 release with multigenerational guest stars, and projects by Tammy Wynette, Neil Young and the blues singer Slim Harpo.

The progressive rock band Kansas recorded its 1978 hit “Dust in the Wind” at Woodland Sound as well.

In addition to his daughter Diane, Mr. Snoddy is survived by another daughter, Glenda Keller; a son, James; four grandsons; and a great-granddaughter. His wife of 69 years, Sara Francis (Fite) Snoddy, died last year.

In 2016, more than a half-century after the fact, Mr. Snoddy reflected with droll amusement on the incident that inspired the creation of the fuzz box.

“We thought there was something wrong,” he said in an interview with The Daily News Journal, of Murfreesboro, Tenn.

“And something was wrong,” he went on. “The transformer in the amplifier blew up!”

Image result for Glenn Snoddy

Glenn Snoddy, Nashville E...Dead at 96

This past Monday evening, notable engineer and fuzz effect innovator Glenn Snoddy passed away in his Murfreesboro, Tennessee home at the age of 96.

Goddard Lerberson, Frances Preston, Don Law, Bill Gallager,
and Glenn Snoddy, 1965 (Photo by Joe Rudis)

Snoddy first learned about sound engineering while serving in the Army. After finishing his service with three bronze stars, he worked doing radio shows at the Transcription Company at Fourth and Union while also moonlighting as a backup engineer at Castle Studio. "I was the backup engineer on the last Hank Williams recording session there. That’s a memory that doesn’t leave you," he told The Tennessean in 1987.

Snoddy's record engineering career continued to blossom from there, and he went on to work on records like Johnny Cash's 1963 hit "Ring of Fire" and 1960's "Don't Worry" by Marty Robbins—noted for its cutting-edge fuzzy, distorted tone.

Marty Robbins - "Don't Worry"

Mid-way through a recording of the track in-studio, a transformer blew in Grady Martin's bass amp (or the recording console, depending who's telling the story), causing his bass to distort. Captivated by the fuzzy tone, Snoddy designed an effect pedal to replicate the sound which he would later sell to the Gibson corporation. Marketed as the Maestro Fuzz-Tone, Snoddy's design can be heard on The Rolling Stones' "(I Can't Get No) Satisfaction" and countless other classic rock hits of the '60s.

In 1967, Snoddy converted an old movie complex into his own studio compound called Woodland Studios. Over the years, musicians like Willie Nelson, Loretta Lynn, Neil Young, Jimmy Buffett, and many more have made notable records there, as have current owners Gillian Welch and David Rawlings.

Snoddy is survived by his son, two daughters, and grandchildren.

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Reply #43 posted 05/30/18 9:44am

JoeBala

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On the plane for his return trip from Hawaii on May 19, 1972 - he was "getting a tan" in preparation for his June Madison Square Garden shows.

He elaborates a bit more on Elvis in this video(16:40 mark if you don't want to see the whole vid).

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[Edited 5/31/18 7:59am]

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Reply #44 posted 05/31/18 7:06am

JoeBala

Leslie Odom Jr., Quincy Jones, & More Featured in Upcoming PBS Documentary THE JAZZ AMBASSADORS

jazz-amb.jpg?itok=QFkrDIHm

by TV News Desk Mar. 28, 2018

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The Cold War and Civil Rights movement collide in the broadcast premiere of The Jazz Ambassadors on Friday, May 4 at 10 p.m. on PBS (check local listings). The documentary will be available to stream the following day (May 5) online at pbs.organd PBS apps.

This remarkable story of music, diplomacy and race explores how America's most famous jazz musicians -- Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington, Benny Goodman and Dave Brubeck -- became America's most important cultural ambassadors. In 1955, as the Soviet Union's pervasive propaganda about the U.S. and American racism spread globally, African-American Congressman Adam Clayton Powell, Jr. convinced President Eisenhower that jazz was the best way to intervene in the Cold War cultural conflict. Narrated by Leslie Odom, Jr., the documentary features new interviews with Quincy Jones, Adam Clayton Powell III, and others.

The Cold War and Civil Rights movement collide in this remarkable story of music, diplomacy and race. In 1955, as the Soviet Union's pervasive propaganda about the U.S. and American racism spread globally, African-American Congressman Adam ClaytonPowell, Jr. convinced President Eisenhower that jazz was the best way to intervene in the Cold War cultural conflict. For the next decade, America's most influential jazz artists, including Dizzy Gillespie, Louis Armstrong, Duke Ellington,Benny Goodman and Dave Brubeck, along with their racially-integrated bands, traveled the globe to perform as cultural ambassadors.

jazzam.jpg

But the unrest back home forced them to face a painful moral dilemma: how could they promote the image of a tolerant America abroad when the country still practiced Jim Crow segregation and racial equality remained an unrealized dream? Told through striking archival film footage, photos and radio clips, with iconic performances throughout, the documentary reveals how the U.S. State Department unwittingly gave the burgeoning Civil Rights movement a major voice on the world stage just when it needed one most. Leslie Odom, Jr., narrates.

Photo Credit: Walter McBride

Karen Jonas Shows Great Taste, Cooks Up Delish Dish Made With Real "Butter" (premiere)

30 May 2018
Photo: Amber Renée Photography

VIRGINIA SINGER-SONGWRITER KAREN JONAS PRESENTS THE MUSIC VIDEO PREMIERE OF THE TITLE SONG FROM HER THIRD FULL-LENGTH ALBUM THAT WILL BE RELEASED ON JUNE 1.

Music is Karen Jonas' bread and butter. Or, in this case, pure, unadulterated butter.

That's exactly what the Fredericksburg, Virginia-based singer-songwriter dishes out as the main ingredient in the music video she premieres today (May 30) at PopMatters. There is nothing better than the real thing — the title song to her album Butter that will be released independently on Friday (June 1).

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Karen Jonas releases her third full-length album on June 1. / Photo: Amber Renée Photography

"I wanted to incorporate some different roles that I play in this video," said Jonas, who does double duty as a full-time mother of four and a busy musician who plays more than 150 shows a year and is releasing her third album, following her 2014 debut Oklahoma Lottery and 2016's Country Songs.

"I am myself a mama in the kitchen and singer on stage, and then also at a retro fun cocktail party. [Director] Ryan Poe really helped to cement these concepts with the shots he chose."

Check out "Butter" now, then learn more about the music video, the jazzy, horny (as in trumpet, trombone and sax) song, the album and Jonas, whose quotes were provided by her publicist. Then, as they say in the South, bring your appetite. Here's just a taste of the lyrics that will leave you drooling for more:

  • Stop on by for dinner / try it don't you wanna
  • you're gonna love her / Mama cooks with butter

Poe, a Fredericksburg videographer, shot previous videos for Jonas songs such as "Wasting Time" and "Country Songs", which feature live performance settings. But the retro-cool aspects of "Butter" put Jonas in various locations. A kitchen scene was filmed in the home of guitarist Tim Bray (her musical partner for almost five years) because "his kitchen is more photogenic than mine," Jonas said.

Other live shots took place in "an elegant venue" called Fredericksburg Square — "They have a fantastic cabaret stage that I knew would be perfect for the vibe," Jonas said — and Smithsonian, Doug Stewart's historic downtown home that's no relation to the museums in Washington, D.C., but turned out to be the perfect place to throw a cocktail party.

Playing "Mama" meant, of course, Jonas' children were able to make cameo appearances in the kitchen scene. Who knows if they'll return for the sequel, though.

"There were a couple of minor mishaps," Jonas admitted. "There was the part where Hazel (7) got flour in June's (9) eye and almost got fired from her video role. PJ (2) took a big spill the day before the shoot and had a black eye and a bump on his forehead so enormous and unfortunate that he could only be filmed from behind."

Jonas, rooted in folk and country music, takes on plenty of genres from ragtime to blues to soul on the 10-track album, which she wrote and recorded in Fredericksburg. The sessions were held in the evening after her kids went to bed, and Jonas made the 5-minute drive to Wally Cleaver's Recording studio, where she co-produced with Bray and Jeff Covert.

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Singer-songwriter Karen Jonas said, "I wanted 'Butter' to be classy and sexy." / Photo: Amber Renée Photography

The title song gave Jonas a chance to show she isn't defined by just one role — this entertainer, guitarist, singer, songwriter and mother can handle the heat — in or out of the kitchen.

"I wanted 'Butter' to be classy and sexy," Jonas said. "It's retro-domestic; it's about a mama who's not just showing up, she's owning it. I work at night playing music, so I have the chance to spend my days taking care of my four kids. I am proud of my role as a mother and a musician. I wanted that to shine through in 'Butter.' "

While watching Jonas pour it on, Mama might even say, "Life is butter than ever."

Michael Bialas is a journalist and photographer who enjoys writing about entertainment and sports for a number of online publications, including PopMattersand No Depression. Follow him on Twitter: @mjbialas

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1.
Yellow Brick Road
2.
My Sweet Arsonist
3.
Butter 03:30
4.
Gospel of the Road
5.
Kamikaze Love
6.
Oh Icarus
7.
Mama's First Rodeo
8.
Dance With Me
9.
Mr. Wonka
10.
The Circus


Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...KmxflmUPOA

Camila Cabello Covers ‘Rolling Stone,’ Talks Fifth Harmony & “Havana”

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Mike Wass @mikewassmusic | May 30, 2018 12:32 pm
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The pop girls are showing out today (May 30). Ariana Grande lands on the cover of Fader, while Camila Cabello graces Rolling Stone. The 21-year-old celebrates the streaming success of “Havana” (it is the most-streamed song by a female artist on Spotify) and reveals that it almost wasn’t a single. “They said that radio would never play it, that it was too slow, too chill,” she says. “It just taught me a huge lesson: Screw whatever’s ‘going to work’ – you just have to go with the thing that you feel is the most you.”

Camila was also asked about her departure from Fifth Harmony. “I don’t think there was ever a point where I was like, ‘I want to leave because I’m the breakout star,'” she explains. “We were just really young. If we were in the same situation now, it would probably be fine for everyone to make their own music while being in the group, because I think everyone understands now that you can’t limit people. That’s why people break free.” Read the interview here and see the full cover below.

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Read the interview: https://www.rollingstone....ny-w520789

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FADER/JASON NOCITO

Ariana Grande Covers 'FADER' Magazine's Summer Music Issue

Speaking about her upcoming album, the Manchester bombing and more.

Shortly after releasing her single “No Tears Left to Cry” earlier this month, Ariana Grande sat down with FADER magazine for her first big interview since the traumatic Manchester bombing. Discussing the tragedy and the heartbreak around it, she shares how it has motivated her to do more, and bring people together through love. “The fact that all of those people were able to turn something that represented the most heinous of humanity into something beautiful and unifying and loving is just wild,” she said, referring to everything being done after the event.

The singer also discussed her new perspective that inspired her most personal album yet, Sweetener, that is set to release in July. With almost half the tracks produced by Pharrell Williams, the interview also revealed that we can expect features from both Missy Elliott and Nicki Minaj.“That’s what Nicki Minaj does, she elevates a record. If you’re going to have a rapper on a song, they need to really really really be there for a reason, and she does that every single time,” the singer said. Grande previously teased a track... the album featuring Minaj, on her Twitter, but it remains to see what the full song will sound like.

Peep Ariana Grande’s FADER cover in the gallery above, and read the full interview online.

Tony James and Billy Idol on Jonesy's Jukebox 5/21/18

Paramore's Hayley Williams wrote a personal essay about her mental health struggles

“I didn’t eat, I didn’t sleep, I didn’t laugh... for a long time.”

May 30, 2018
hayley-williams-paramore-paper-essay.jpgPhoto by ANGELA WEISS/AFP/Getty Images

Hayley Williams shared a personal essay about her mental health struggles for PAPER on Wednesday. While noting that she's "still hesitant to call it depression," the Paramore frontwoman described her past few years, facing trials from divorce, the loss of a bandmate, and financial distress.

"A lot happened within a short time," she writers. "But then I didn't eat, I didn't sleep, I didn't laugh... for a long time."

Ultimately, she says it was her work as an artist that helped her through her rough period, as well as the support from her friends, including bandmates. Referring to the band's latest album, 2017's After Laughter, she calls this period in her journey "Life with AL," citing her work on it as healing.

"Writing opened my heart to healing as Zac Farro bolted back into mine and Taylor's daily lives like lightning," she says, citing Farro's return the band after a brief split. "Now every night on tour, I turn around and there's my brother back on the drums again. No more denial. No more walking across traffic like the old lady in the cartoon who doesn't even notice the wreckage behind her when she's barely made it to the other side."

Read the full essay here.

*

*

*

[Edited 5/31/18 7:21am]

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Reply #45 posted 05/31/18 7:34am

JoeBala

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #46 posted 05/31/18 8:12am

JoeBala

Three years after Into the Wild Life, Halestorm is set to release their fourth album, Vicious on July 27. Watch the video for the first single, "Uncomfortable," above.

Recorded earlier this year at Nashville’s Rock Falcon recording studio with producer Nick Raskulinecz (Foo Fighters, Alice In Chains, Rush). We'll talk to the band a bit more about the album tomorrow, Thursday, May 31, when we host a Facebook live with the members -- singer/guitarist Lzzy Hale, drummer Arejay Hale, guitarist Joe Hottinger and bassist Josh Smith -- tomorrow at 12:45 pm ET.

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The band will embark on the second leg of their U.S. tour showcasing all female-fronted hard rock bands. The dates – once again co-headlined by In This Moment; New Year’s Day will open. See the dates below along with the artwork and track listing for Vicious and pre-order the album here.

Halestorm, Vicious Artwork + Track Listing

Atlantic

1. Black Vultures
2. Skulls
3. Uncomfortable
4. Buzz
5. Do Not Disturb
6. Conflicted
7. Killing Ourselves yo Live
8. Heart of Novocaine
9. Painkiller
10. White Dress
11. Vicious
12. The Silence

Halestorm Tour Dates
All Dates w/In This Moment except *
Dates with New Years Day ++

JULY
01 Maidstone, U.K. @ Ramblin’ Man Fair*
12 — Oshkosh, Wis. @ Rock USA *
13 — Cadott, Wis. @ Rock Fest *
27 — Kansas City, Mo. @ Silverstein Eye Centers Arena ++
28 — Dubuque, Iowa @ Dubuque County Fair *
29 — Toledo, Ohio @ Centennial Terrace ++
31 — Baltimore, Md. @ UMBC Event Center ++

AUGUST
02 — Uncasville, Conn. @ Mohegan Sun Arena ++
03 — Albany, N.Y. @ Capital Center ++
04 — Portland, Main @Maine State Pier++
06 — Asbury Park, N.J. @ Stone Pony Summer Stage++
07 — Columbus, Ohio @ Express Live ++
09 — Moorehead, Minn. @ Bluestem Amphitheater (w/ Joan Jett) *
10 — Council Bluffs, Iowa @ Stir Cove ++
11 — Springfield, Ill. @ Illinois State Fair *
14 — Missoula, Mont. @ Big Sky Brewing Company ++
16 — Spokane, Wash. @ Star Theater at Spokane Arena ++
17 — Seattle, Wash. @ WAMU ++
18 — Eugene, Ore. @ Cuthbert Amphitheater ++
20 — Medford, Ore. @ Bi-Mart Amphitheater ++
21 — Reno, Nev. @ Grand Sierra Resort ++
23 — San Francisco, Calif. @ The Warfield ++
24 — Valley Center, Calif. @ Harrah’s Resort SoCal Events Center ++
25 — Las Vegas, Nev. @ Fremont Street *

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...aanowedKoY

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Reply #47 posted 05/31/18 9:54am

JoeBala

The Sister Souljah Reader's Companion: A Collection of Excerpts by [Souljah, Sister]

Free Kindle Book Download: https://www.amazon.com/Si...amp;sr=1-8

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Reply #48 posted 06/01/18 7:36am

JoeBala

LAMONT DOZIER, REIMAGINATION: ALBUM REVIEW

Celebrated Motown writer and producer Lamont Dozier has released an album covering his greatest works, with help from some famous friends.

Image result for new album Reimagination Lamont Dozier

As one third of the Motown song-writing and producing trio Holland-Dozier-Holland, Lamont Dozier is, by account of their hit records, one of the most successful songwriters of all time. Along with Brian and Eddie Holland, Dozier was responsible for some of the greatest soul and pop hits of the twentieth century. Holland-Dozier-Holland, also known as ‘H-D-H’, helped to perfect the fabled “Motown Sound”, writing and producing hits for the likes of the Four Tops, Martha Reeves & The Vandellas, Mary Wells, The Marvelettes, Marvin Gaye, The Isley Brothers, Brenda Holloway, The Supremes and many, many more. Of the 12 Number 1 hits The Supremes recorded, 10 were written and produced by H-D-H.

And that was just in the decade or so that the trio spent at Motown.

Once they left Motown they formed their own label, and scored hits with Chairmen of the Board and Freda Payne. Dozier would eventually start recording and performing himself, releasing the soul classic ‘Why Can’t We Be Lovers’ along with other lesser-known, but equally brilliant tracks, such as ‘Fish Ain’t Biting‘, ‘Take Off Your Make Up‘ and the original version of ‘Going Back to My Roots‘. He also crafted hits for Phil Collins (‘Two Hearts’) and Simply Red (‘You Got It’), and co-wrote with Collins the last Four Tops hit ‘Loco In Acapulco‘.

All in all, Lamont Dozier is a seriously impressive man whose mark on American soul and pop music is so great it’s difficult to comprehend. Today, Dozier is 76 and is once again reflecting on his glory days at Motown, releasing his new album entitled Reimaginaton, a collection of covers featuring him and some very special guests performing his greatest hits.

A picture of Lamont Dozier's new album, Reimagination.

Lamont Dozier’s new album, Reimagination.

This isn’t the first time that Dozier has covered his own work. Back in 2001 Dozier released An American Original, an album covering his Motown-era work, containing a similar selection of songs to Reimagination, but with a heavier focus on slick R&B grooves. The album was retitled as Reflections of Lamont Dozier for a digital re-release in 2004. An American Original/Reflections was an okay album, but most of the song arrangements sounded so much alike that they blended into one. Part of the H-D-H magic at Motown was their ability to craft an overarching sound (the “Motown Sound”) but nonetheless give each of their artists their own uniqueness. A Four Tops song shared similar traits to that of a Martha Reeves song, but they also were distinct enough to tell them apart. Unfortunately, the production on Reflections failed to achieve this.

Fred Mollin, Dozier’s producer on Reimagination has in part learnt that lesson, and instead of using generic R&B grooves, he has opted for more stripped back, largely piano based, arrangements of Dozier’s biggest Motown hits. The result is more pleasurable than Dozier’s previous attempts to cover his own work, making Reimagination one of Dozier’s strongest and most sophisticated solo works.

Firstly, it must be said, that Lamont Dozier remains in fine voice. In fact, his voice has aged remarkably well, sounding just like it did back in the seventies and eighties on previous solo albums. It’s hard to describe his voice, but it’s one of the most distinctive in soul music, being sensual and smooth yet still gruff in places. Dozier possesses one of the forgotten great voices in soul. Thankfully, Mollin’s new arrangements on Reimagination allow Dozier’s voice to shine through, re-imagining these Motown hits of the sixties.

Something else Reimagination has over it’s predecessor is an impressive list of collaborators, including Graham Nash, Gregory Porter and Sir Cliff Richard. Interestingly, although Dozier and Mollin have included these guest stars the album can’t really be called a “duets album” as the guests mostly perform backing duties, a line here and there and a few ad libs. It’s Dozier who handles the majority of the lead vocals, and given the strength of his voice it’s a wise choice.

The album opens with a ‘Supremes Medley’, comprising of ‘Where Did Our Love Go’, ‘Stop! In the Name of Love’ and ‘Baby Love’. Graham Nash features in the backing vocals, although his contribution is placed fairly low down in the mix. Unlike the uptempo original versions, Mollin and Dozier have opted for a much slower tempo for these songs, and for much of the album more generally. This has the effect of adding a sense of poignancy to the songs and the lyrics that was perhaps somewhat lost in the original Supremes’ versions. This is helped further with Dozier’s pleading vocals, which contrast with the relatively straightforward performances by Diana Ross on the originals.

Dozier also takes a stab at two other hits originally recorded by The Supremes, ‘You Keep Me Hanging On’ and ‘Reflections’. On the former, British singer Rumer is enlisted to provide silky smooth backing vocals, and combined with Mollin’s gospel-tinged arrangement (complete with organ) and Dozier’s outstanding vocal, it becomes one of the album’s highlights. ‘Reflections’ is equally enjoyable, and features Scottish born singer Justin Currie.

Dozier also covers four songs originally recorded by the Four Tops: ‘Baby I Need Your Loving’, ‘Bernadette’, ‘I Can’t Help Myself (Sugar Pie, Honey Bunch)’ and ‘Reach Out (I’ll Be There)’. Country music icon Lee Ann Womack performs with Dozier on ‘Baby I Need Your Loving’, her voice fitting surprisingly well with Dozier’s soulful tones. ‘Bernadette’ is given an acoustic makeover, while ‘I Can’t Help Myself’ features Dozier and just a piano for accompaniment.

However, it’s ‘Reach Out (I’ll Be There)’ that is the highlight of the four Four Tops songs. We’re given two versions of the song, one featuring British singer Jo Harman and one without. The versions share the same arrangement and vocal by Dozier, but the version with Harman is much more enjoyable thanks to her powerful vocal. Unlike the guest spots on the other tracks, Harman is given a proper duet with Dozier and it pays off. It’s the best track on the album.

Harman also appears on a medley of Holland-Dozier-Holland songs written for Martha Reeves & The Vandellas. Dozier revisits two of Martha’s greatest hits with a medley of “(Love Is Like A) Heatwave” and “Nowhere to Run”. Dozier and Mollin give these songs a tasty jazz makeover, perfectly suited to Harman’s voice.

Gregory Porter, a jazz-pop icon in the making, features on ‘How Sweet It Is (To Be Loved By You)‘, although his contribution is limited, sadly, to a few ad libs and lines here and there, plus some backing vocals. The song is very pleasant, thanks to Porter’s ability to harmonize with Dozier and the bouncy, jazzy arrangement. But it’s still a bit of a shame that Porter’s incredible voice wasn’t featured more prominently.

Perhaps the weakest collaboration on the album is with Sir Cliff Richard on a medley of ‘This Old Heart of Mine’ (originally by The Isley Brothers) and ‘My World is Empty Without You’ (originally by The Supremes). Dozier appeared on Sir Cliff’s Soulicious album a few years ago, and now it’s Sir Cliff’s turn to return the favour. Sadly for Sir Cliff, who is a year older than Dozier, his voice hasn’t stood the test of time quite as well. He’s given a couple of lines to sing and is relegated to backing vocals on ‘This Old Heart of Mine’, and doesn’t seem to feature at all on ‘My World’. Which is probably wise, as his backing vocals have been given the Brian Wilson (of The Beach Boys) treatment: triple tracked with perhaps a hint of autotune. It’d probably be best if Sir Cliff had stayed away from the studio.

Refreshingly, Dozier doesn’t just stick to the well known hits. He’s included two songs which weren’t as big as the rest, but two nonetheless great songs: Martha Reeves & The Vandellas’ ‘In My Lonely Room‘ and Kim Weston’s ‘Take Me In Your Arms (Roc...tle While)‘. ‘In My Lonely Room’ is an excellent song, and Mollin’s dark and moody arrangement suits the song perfectly. Todd Rundgren also performs a nice guitar solo on song. Meanwhile, ‘Take Me In Your Arms’ is given a folk-rock feel (not dissimilar to what The Doobie Brothers did w...ng in 1975) aided by folk artist Marc Cohen.

All in all, Reimagination is a very good record from Lamont Dozier that sits alongside the best of his solo work. The stripped down production orchestrated by Mollin provide us with a new way to listen to these well-loved and frequently played classics. The album finds Dozier reflecting on his illustrious career, but it’s strength lies in these innovative new arrangements. It would have been easy for Dozier to just do straight covers, but by re-working these songs the results are much more impressive and enjoyable.

Although the guest stars will (hopefully) help the album gain traction, most of the guests really aren’t needed; Dozier’s strong voice is all these songs require. That said, Lee Ann Womack’s apperance is surprisingly great and Jo Harmon’s performances on the Martha Reeves medley and on ‘Reach Out (I’ll Be There)’ are sensational. My only criticism is that I’d like to have heard more Gregory Porter.

Looking at the songs selected for Reimagination it’s a reminder of just how successful Holland-Dozier-Holland were. These songs are just the tip of the metaphorical iceburg too: there’s probably enough H-D-H hits for Dozier to record at least two more volumes. Even more impressively, most of their success occurred between 1963 and 1967. It was a five year creative odyssey for H-D-H that not only cemented Motown’s position in music history, but also influenced the musical landscape in the decades that followed. Their unique brand of soulful pop, often imitated but rarely superseded, has lasted the test of time.

Lamont-2018-complete tour flyer

Jackie Venson Goes "Rollin and Tumblin" with a Stellar Performance (premiere)

Photo: Daniel Cavazos

JACKIE VENSON'S NEW MUSIC VIDEO BRINGS US MORE OF THE GUITAR-CENTRIC DYNAMIC BLUES THAT HAS PUT HER ON THE MAP.

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=182&v=YtbTVcfTRXI

Jackie Venson has been rising in recognition quickly with her dynamic take on contemporary, guitar-centric blues. Notably, she has already garnered the eye of blues mainstay Gary Clark Jr., touring with him throughout 2017. Last year also saw the release of Venson's EP, Transcends, which she is now following up with a new video for her single, "Rollin and Tumblin".

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In many ways, with Venson's deeply soulful tone wrapping itself warmly around its frank lyricism, it feels like a revival of classic blues. Her means of handling her guitar, though, carry an individualistic power that shines on Venson's knack for modern composition.

Image result for Jackie Venson and buddy guy

Venson tells PopMatters, "Sometimes in order to heal from great pain you need to open the wound and allow yourself to feel it. This song is my allowance to myself and my acceptance of my broken heart."

1.
Flying 04:15
2.
Fast 03:16
3.
Mysterious 03:25
4.
Fight 02:57
5.
Transcends 03:57

TOUR DATES

7/4 - Freedom Over Texas: Dr. Pepper Stage - Houston, TX

8/3 - Gruene Hall - New Braunfels, TX

8/29 - Schubas Tavern - Chicago, IL

10/6 - Austin City Limits Music Festival - Zilker Park, Austin, TX

Tami Neilson Is Woke on 'SASSAFRASS!'

Photo courtesy of Conqueroo

SASSAFRASS! IS A SLY ACT OF SUBVERSION AS TAMI NEILSON'S VOCALS AND LYRICS ARE UNAPOLOGETIC AS SHE CONFIDENTLY CALLS FOR EQUALITY.

SASSAFRASS!
1.
Stay Outta My Business 02:55
2.
Bananas
3.
Diamond Ring
4.
A Woman's Pain
5.
Devil In a Dress
6.
One Thought of You
7.
Miss Jones
8.
Smoking Gun
9.
Kitty Cat
10.
Manitoba Sunrise at Motel 6
11.
Good Man

TAMI NEILSON

Outside Music

1 June 2018

Tami Neilson is woke. Her new album SASSAFRASS! is a rockabilly-infused roots album that confidently calls for equality. Her liner notes emphatically dedicate the album to "every woman and man, fighting the good fight for equality". The Canadian-born, New Zealand-based singer/songwriter's newest release, out June 1 from Outside Music, is a rollicking and gritty album. SASSAFRASS! is a sly act of subversion as Neilson's vocals and lyrics are unapologetic while the music unleashes resolute assurance. In doing so, she imbues the album with a pertinent sense of society while projecting her vision of progress.

Neilson comes out swinging with the opening track "Stay Outta My Business". The song introduces Neilson's full vocal range which she continues to feature for the album's duration. The track has a clear rockabilly vibe as listeners hear country, rock 'n' roll, and soul music overlap. She toys with the specters of Wanda Jackson's electric vocals while her lyrics embrace modernity. The track is an absolute feminist anthem. Neilson uses each verse to feature differing double standards imposed onto women. As she sings "a woman stay home to raise the babies / 'Must be nice to do nothing, must be lazy' / And so she go out to make the money / 'How can you leave your babies, you're a bad, bad Mommy'." She ultimately demands "stay outta my business" and keeps her power intact.

SASSAFRASS!, the slang term for a self-assured person, announces the album's theme before listening. Almost every track specifically deals with a myriad of issues that compromise equality. The binary forcing women to identify as either virginal or accursed is conjured in "Devil in a Dress". The melody is echoed by a trumpet, an instrument traditionally used to symbolize dichotomy, which is fitting for the track's subject. On "Bananas" she argues for equal pay for women when she croons, "It's bananas she wants equal pay just for / Working all night and day." Here she also uses double entendre to represent the association between anatomy and gender norms in a hilarious manner.

Image result for tami neilson is woke. her new album sassafrass!

"Smoking Gun" specifically contends with the predatory and rampant sexual misconduct "neath the Hollywood sign" and the survivors who "paid up their ransom in flesh". It's difficult not to envision Harvey Weinstein's repugnant face when Neilson sings "the king of the casting couch... squirming like a worm under our magnifying glass". Hushed vocals interlaced by Joe McCallum's percussion gives the track a menacing feel while awakening memories of Nancy Sinatra's "Bang Bang".

The lyrical empowerment carries over to the raucous "Kitty Cat". Here Neilson reminds that a woman's body is her own and men are not entitled to sex. She specifically addresses the archaic but unfortunately prevalent norm about putting out after a purchased dinner. Yet Neilson mocks entitlement when she sings, "Don't you say no and make me pout / Kitty cat, kitty cat / Don't be a silly brat / One little kiss ain't going to put you out."

Likewise, self-reliance is the focus of "Diamond Ring" as she serenades "If there's a table for one / I'm going to take it / Don't need the pain that lovin' brings." This particular track incorporates rich vocal harmonies from female backup singers evoking a Doo-wop sound. That energy is carried over to the ballad "One Thought of You", underscored by Neil Watson's pedal steel guitar. Both tracks reiterate the sound of a bygone era.

Neilson's gratitude is generous as several tracks are testimonials to her predecessor's influences. She pays tribute to Sharon Jones as the "Genuine, real deal / Girl has always kept it real" on the soul number "Miss Jones". Dealing with her own bouts of sexism and racism, Jones' powerhouse personality and musicality are obviously Neilson's inspiration. The tributes continue as "Manitoba Sunrise at Motel 6" is written in homage to Glen Campbell while "A Woman's Pain" illustrates Neilson's first-nation grandmother. This track returns Neilson to country music as her acoustic guitar finds a balance between the bass and strings.

Throughout SASSAFRASS!, Neilson challenges dominant forms of oppression while calling for progressive change. Her candor contributes to the album's mettle and strength. Neilson undoubtedly channels self-empowerment and societal change to position SASSAFRASS! as musical dynamite.

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...5xO8p-JcIg

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Reply #49 posted 06/01/18 7:37am

JoeBala

Album of the Month - Tower of Power celebrates 50 in style

Listen: https://www.youtube.com/w..._apasQHwjs

RL Grime, Daya Relive '90s Childhoods in 'I Wanna Know' Music Video: Watch

Courtesy Photo
RL Grime featuring Daya, "I Wanna Know"

Wasn't everything better in the '90s? Tamagotchis, Ring Pops, plaid crop tops and blazer suit dresses. What a time to be alive, and thankfully, the '90s are still quite back and coming in heavy in the music video for RL Grime and Daya's delightful dance-pop crossover "I Wanna Know."

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Looks like Daya and some friends decided to relive childhood in a lowkey motel somewhere, possibly in the California desert. It's a fun visual daydream for the single that peaked at No. 19 on the Hot Dance/Electronic Songs chart back in March.

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Still no word on when RL Grime's new album will actually drop, but this groovetastic clip should hold you over for a few more weeks at least. Enjoy the nostalgia below, and remember to put your Tamagotchi under your desk before your teacher walks by.

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...wiOGuKEgkY

Mazzy Star: Still EP Review

MUSIC REVIEWS MAZZY STAR

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Mazzy Star: <i>Still</i> EP Review

“I want to hold the hand inside you / I want to take a breath that’s true / I look to you and I see nothing / I look to you to see the truth.” Perhaps no song better captures the sound of a certain time and place than Mazzy Star’s “Fade Into You.” A tendril of the Paisley Underground scene that infiltrated Los Angeles in the ‘80s, Mazzy Star remain beloved for their fuzzy guitar workouts, their sleepy, velvet-draped ennui, and the beauty and mystery of ethereal frontwoman and lyricist Hope Sandoval.

After releasing three albums in the ‘90s, multi-instrumentalist David Roback and Sandoval branched out with various solo projects before reconvening for 2013’s Seasons Of Your Day, their first album in 17 years. Five years later, Still serves as the next entry, a four-track EP that takes up right where their discography left off.

Image result for mazzy star 2018

“Quiet, The Winter Harbor” opens the EP with Roback’s piano, a plaintive, melancholy tone that stands alone until Sandoval’s signature vocals come in. It’s a familiar sound—Sandoval’s voice hasn’t aged a day—but it isn’t until the melty slide guitar comes in that the Mazzy Star sound is complete. As always, the effect is sleepily romantic, yet disassociated—causing you to feel everything and nothing at all as the waltz tempo is kept by the gentlest tapping on the hi-hat.

For years, Roback and Sandoval have stuck close to this template, mixing elements of psych, post-punk, acoustic singer-songwriter and melty, sun-dappled guitars to hypnotic effect. “That Way Again” and “Still” are no different, the warm acoustic guitar, open air, and Sandoval’s diary-poet lyrics of the best of their ‘90s albums.

Closing the EP is a rework of “So Tonight That I Might See,” the title track of their 1993 LP. This one washed with organ and reverb to the other’s drone and stomp, Sandoval’s child-like vocals still sounding like the chant of a mantra. They tack on nearly a minute, but also a knowingness. It’s a nice look back that also manages to ground the rest of the work in context.

While the sound hasn’t changed much, neither has the impact of the music that they’ve mastered. 28 years later, Mazzy Star can still create a hell of a mood, their dark romanticism and California sounding anything but dated.

Still EP Tracklist:
01. Quiet, The Winter Harbour
02. That Way Again
03. Still
04. So Tonight That I Might See (acension Version)

LUMP (Laura Marling and Mike Lindsay) reveal self-titled debut album: Stream

ON JUNE 01, 2018, 1:52AM

Earlier this year, Laura Marling and Tunng founding member Mike Lindsay joined forces to form the duo LUMP. Today, they celebrate the release of their self-titled debut album. Stream it in full below via Apple Music or Spotify.

LUMP marks the first official collaboration between Marling and Lindsay. Recorded at the latter’s London studio, it features music by Lindsay and lyrics and vocals by Marling. Per a press statement, Marling’s contributions are described as “a bizarre but compelling narrative about the commodification of curated public personas, the mundane absurdity of individualism, and the lengths we go to escape our own meaninglessness.”

Early singles include “Curse of the Contemporary” and “Late to the Flight”. The two-piece also performed on Later… with Jools Holland.

artwork

LUMP Tracklist:
01. Late To The Flight
02. May I Be The Light
03. Rolling Thunder
04. Curse Of The Contemporary
05. Hand Hold Hero
06. Shake Your Shelter
07. LUMP is a Product (credits)

Listen: https://open.spotify.com/...k7VSO0LSyQ

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Reply #50 posted 06/01/18 9:33am

JoeBala

parker_mckay_final_art_cover_v1.jpg

Free download:https://noisetrade.com/pa...rker-mckay

Parker-McKay.png

Who’s New: Parker McKay

Age: 26
Born: Pittsburgh
Lives: Nashville
EP: Parker McKay
Single: “Rolling Stone”
Twitter: @HeyParkerMcKay
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The Scoop

After growing up in the Northeast and honing her stage skills in New York City, Parker McKay moved to Nashville in 2014 to pursue a career in country music. In her two years in Music City, Parker has written more than 150 songs, strumming her guitar and singing at numerous songwriter rounds, including gracing the stage with artists such as Maren Morris and Natalie Hemby. On August 12, Parker will release her self-titled debut EP, which features six songs that she co-wrote, including the single “Rolling Stone.”

Carpool Karaoke

“More than any person I know, I was exposed to music by my mom just singing in the car. I know that’s a memory almost everyone has, but I feel like we did that so much more often. I guess it’s because we were driving all the time. My mom was a church singer and my dad actually has this really beautiful voice that he’ll joke-sing Frank Sinatra but he sounds incredible. Growing up, my mom and I listened to Sheryl Crow, Faith Hill, the Dixie Chicks, and I listened to all the divas like Celine Dion, Mariah Carey, Whitney Houston. I always just imitated them. I grew up imitating those strong ’90s females like Sheryl and Bonnie Raitt. I kinda built my musical sensibilities from that.”

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Life’s a Stage

“I’ve wanted to be a singer since I could form a thought—that or a figure skater [laughing]. I always knew I wanted to sing. It was never a question for me. I did my first talent show at age 8 and ever since then, anytime I could get a microphone in my hand, I did. And I did choir and theater—I studied theater in New York. I’m so glad I did because it has given me such a sense of empowerment because I’m so used to accessing my emotions and you have to have a huge stage presence when you’re in a show. So it’s given me a lot of confidence and let me kind of grow a stage persona.”

Parker-McKay1.pngMaking the Rounds

“I went to every open mic and met everyone I could when I moved to Nashville. And I asked them to introduce me to friends. I fell into a cool group of people. My most important thing was I felt like I needed to write every single day. For the first year, I wrote six days a week. It’s amazing because writing is like a muscle that you have to use. One day I wrote this one song, and it just started making sense for me. I understand the structure. Now I can crank them out and get them done a lot more efficiently. The process is such a groove thing.”

Finding Her Sound

“I think a big mistake artists can make is to put out music just to have content. And a lot of artists are striving to sound like what’s on the radio, and I think that’s a big mistake. You can get lost in the shuffle, even if you are something brilliant and amazing and new. I wanted this album to open a door to the evolution of country. I think a lot of really amazing country elements have been lost lately in a lot of popular music, and I want to bring back some of the rock sensibilities a little bit and the rawness and grittiness of that. I want it to be real and new.”

Like a Rolling Stone

“The idea for my single ‘Rolling Stone’ came about because I had a couple of friends [T.J. and John Osborne of Brothers Osborne] get nominated for a Grammy and I was just sitting there thinking about that one day. About how hard they’ve worked and the road it took them to get there, and how long it’s been for them. It’s just such a huge, iconic thing, and then I was thinking about some of the other things that happen like that—Grammys, gold records, big milestones like being on the cover of Rolling Stone—and it was one of those songs that just came to me, the melody and lyrics. I went into a co-write with it that day and it just came out. It’s about the love of music, but more so about how it’s a driving force in life and nothing is as important as your passion.”

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Watch:

https://www.youtube.com/w...o8zMVLcZy4

&

https://www.youtube.com/w...Ct1DY468Hs

Mickey Guyton Talks Love Of Dolly Parton, Following Your Dreams, And The Best Advice She Ever Received From Her Mom

"Country music isn't just music — it's a way of life and how we grew up."

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At the age of 8, when she saw LeAnn Rimes perform "The Star-Spangled Banner" at a Texas Rangers game, Mickey Guyton made it her goal to become a country music singer. Now, 26 years later, she is making her dreams come true — one day at a time.

Guyton — whose real name is Candace Mycale Guyton — was born in Arlington back in June 1983. After failing to make it on American Idol, Guyton signed with Capitol Nashville in 2011 and has since released two EPs (2014's Unbreakable and 2015's self-titled offering), and three singles (2015's "Better Than You Left Me," 2016's "Heartbreak Song," and 2017's "Nice Things"), debuted at the legendary Grand Ole Opry, and famously covered "Do You Want to Build a Snowman?" from Disney's Frozen, in addition to earning a 2016 Academy of Country Music nomination for New Female Vocalist of the Year.

The 34-year-old — who lists Miranda Lambert's "House That Built Me" as a song "very near to my heart" and one she wishes belonged to her — isn't done, though. If she wasn't making history as one of the very few Black singers in the country genre, Guyton said she wouldn't have strayed far, going down the path of being a vocal coach with her very own vocal studio because, as she put it, "I'd love to help other people make their dreams in music come true."

A Plus caught up with Guyton to discuss everything from being both Black and a woman in a genre dominated by men, how she has overcome any challenges along the way, her love of classic country music (yes, including Dolly Parton), and much more.

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Courtesy: Borman Entertainment

A PLUS: What’s the greatest piece of advice you’ve been given, and how do you apply it in your daily life and/or career?

MICKEY GUYTON: My mom told me to find my purpose within my purpose. My purpose is to lift people up through my songs. When I get down or discouraged, it's because I'm not pursuing the purpose within my purpose. Once I snap into that frame of mind, I'm good.

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We see that you have been very outspoken in your support for women, artists and otherwise. Why is that so important to you?

It's important to me because it can be hard for us out there. That's what is so beautiful about Nashville, we are all about lifting each other up. If one person wins, we all win — and celebrate that!

Women in country music don’t get as much radio play as their male counterparts — and I can only imagine that is even more difficult for a Black artist, too. Why do you think there’s so much emphasis placed on “bro country” these days, and is that tide shifting?

Honestly, it's hard being a woman in country music, period. For a while there was a huge emphasis on "bro country" and I like that type of country music but I do feel that the tide is shifting. This is a really exciting time for country music because you see different trends developing and so many different sounds coming out of Nashville right now. People want to hear real country songs these days.

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There definitely are influential Black people in the history of country music, but not that many. Growing up, who did you look up to in the genre and why those specific people?

I looked up to Dolly Parton because that's who my grandma used to listen to. I also loved how fearless Dolly was and still is. The country music genre was and still can be pretty conservative, but Dolly completely defied that with amazing songs, an amazing mind, and a bold look. She showed her curves and was proud of it. To me, it's really cool to own who you are like that and that is why I love her.

Have you ever been discouraged to or faced challenges about pursuing a career in country music and, if so, how do you overcome negativity to continue following your dreams?

Absolutely. I get discouraged and frustrated sometimes, just like everyone who is chasing a dream with everything they have does. Music is hard because it's so personal. I put everything I have into the songs I put out. I get through it by being as positive as I possibly can. I have moments where I don't feel like getting up and writing a song but I do it anyway. I just remember that there are hard days no matter what profession you choose. No one is exempt from that. I always try to keep that in mind. I also have an incredible support system and community in Nashville of friends, other artists, and writers who are so encouraging, and my fans, too! Seeing their messages and comments every day helps me to stay motivated.

What is the most inspiring thing a fan has told you in regard to what your success in country music has meant to them?

I have young girls of many different races and backgrounds messaging me on my social media platforms, telling me that I inspire them to pursue their dreams in country music. To me, that is amazing and keeps me going.

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Courtesy: Borman Entertainment

We know you’re a massive fan of legends such as Dolly Parton and chose to sing Patsy Cline’s “Crazy” for President Obama — are you naturally drawn to classic country? Why?

I'm definitely naturally drawn to country music just because that's what I grew up around in Texas. That's what I grew up listening to. I'm also drawn to soulful music because I grew up singing in the church. That's what I liked to sing.

What’s the biggest misconception or assumption you think people have about country music that is totally wrong in your opinion?

Some people may automatically think it's just twangy music. They have no idea the skill set of these songwriters and musicians in this town to be able to tell a story. It's very humbling. Also, country music isn't just music — it's a way of life and how we grew up.

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And finally, what should we expect from your new music? Any themes, inspirations, or collaborations in particular?

I've really enjoyed the process of making music and my journey to where I am now. I am so excited to continue to get new songs out to the fans that show different aspects of who I am and different experiences that I have had. You should expect country music that shares my stories, what inspires me, and hopefully helps brighten people's day.

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Buy and/or stream Mickey Guyton's newest single, "Nice Things," here.

Watch: https://www.youtube.com/w...3Mf5eE4AHI

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https://www.youtube.com/w...ABfS-z2CkY

The 10 Best Albums of May 2018

By Loren DiBlasi | May 31, 2018 | 11:00am
Photo by Elizabeth WeinbergMUSIC FEATURES

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As we approach 2018’s halfway point, great new releases keep cropping up here at Paste. Some of our favorite records in May included reissues and returns (Liz Phair, Stephen Malkmus), exciting debuts (Cut Worms) and career-bests (Jess Williamson, La Luz). From psych to country to ambient, check out all our favorite albums of May 2018.

10. Cut Worms: Hollow Ground
Rating 7.8
Throughout the album, Max Clarke explores the intersection of early pop-rock and traditional country, with melody as top priority every step of the way. On the upbeat “How It Can Be,” Clarke’s vocal slides across the top of frolicsome piano and laser-guided electric guitar. “Coward’s Confidence” incorporates horns inside a deep canyon of echo and comes out sounding like a landlocked Beach Boys. And the lush vocal harmonies in the chorus of “Don’t Want to Have to Say Good-Bye” only enhance one of the album’s very best moments.—Ben Salmon

9. La Luz: Floating Features
Rating 7.9
Floating Features finds La Luz—singer/guitarist Shana Cleveland, drummer Marian Li Pino, keyboardist Alice Sandahl, and bassist Lena Simon—relocating from Seattle to Los Angeles. Now that Hollywood is their home, it’s fitting that Floating Features includes references to movement and travel, and overall, cultivates the vintage feel of a B-movie soundtrack. The album’s title track, a soaring instrumental opener, sets the scene for adventure, and fully embraces 60s kitsch via heavy organ, snappy beats and intricate, knotty riffs. —Loren DiBlasi

8. Tracyanne and Danny: Tracyanne and Danny
Rating 8.0
Tracyanne Campbell and Danny Coughlan are better known for their roles in other projects—the former in Scottish pop wonders Camera Obscura and the latter as a soulful British balladeer under the name Crybaby. But they’ll have you know that their first collaborative album Tracyanne & Danny will not be their last. “Tracyanne & Danny is not a diverting curio or a wee stop on the road to someplace else. It is a shared artistic aesthetic, forged over time,” says the duo’s official bio. “They have figured out how to fit round each other and work together, creating a rewarding musical synergy. There will be more songs.” —Ben Salmon

7. Frog Eyes: Violet Psalms
Rating 8.0
For all the moments of unsettling weirdness—and there are plenty—Violet Psalms is almost compulsively listenable. There are flashes of effusive melody: “Idea Man” starts as a bright, hooky tune with a burbling, frenetic beat and sunny vocals until it deflates into an extended come-down in the second half of the song. There are mesmerizing guitar parts, too: A terse and foreboding two-note riff cuts through a wash of noise on “Sleek as the Day Is Done,” then yields to trebly squibs that ring out like demented bell chimes. The pattern repeats as the song builds tension until a huge descending guitar line tumbles down with the force of a slow-motion rock slide. —Eric R. Danton

6. Jess Williamson: Cosmic Wink
Rating 8.2
“I See The White” opens the album like a warm summer breeze on bare shoulders; acoustic guitar and soft, shuffling drums cradling mystic-lite lyrics and a hooky chorus that rolls in like a foam-trimmed wave. “Awakening Baby” —the song you’ll find yourself going to play again as soon as the album’s over—perfectly distills the infatuated feeling of love’s first blossom. “Your hair in my bed is regarded as a relic / My past and my future envy me,” Williamson sings, the relaxed instrumentation and her sleepy voice brimming with cozy contentment.. —Madison Desler

5. Kelly Willis: Back Being Blue
Rating 8.3
Given the fact that Kelly Willis wrote six of these 10 songs and enlisted Rodney Crowell and Randy Weeks for two of the others, that level of proficiency qualifies her for some special distinction. Willis’ allegiance to country tradition and homespun homilies may not find her tampering with the formula, but they do suggest she’s a relevant player regardless. On songs such as “Don’t Step Away,” “Modern World” and “What the Heart Doesn’t Know,” she states her case with a conviction that all but guarantees her authenticity. —Lee Zimmerman

4. Stephen Malkmus & the Jicks: Sparkle Hard
Rating 8.7
As always, Malkmus and his mates have a way of making guitar-rock feel oblique and breezy. They offset the herky-jerky pace of “Future Suite” with synth zaps and a dizzying vocal coda. Lead single “Middle America” gets a lift from Malkmus’ falsetto, the album’s most likeable melody and the comfort of a strummed acoustic guitar. And “Brethren” starts out as a jumbled pile of dissonant parts, but soon forms into the kind of disheveled gem that would fit in perfectly on Pavement’s divisive 1995 album Wowee Zowee. “So you flip-flop over again,” Malkmus sings as an unexpected string section fades out behind him, “to the dark side of the coliseum. Down into a hole, into the cellar, here we go.”—Ben Salmon

3. Sarah Louise: Deeper Woods
Rating 8.8
On Deeper Woods, Sarah Louise fully finds her voice. Literally. It is as much a vocal album as a guitar album, and Louise’s voice is a ideal complement to her six-stringed wizardry, only heightening the beauty and deepening the mystic vibe of her songs. Louise’s voice is a versatile thing; strong and resonant on the low end, suffused with emotion on the high end, constantly sliding up and down between the two. She’s an impressive singer, especially for someone known as a guitar player.—Ben Salmon

2. GAS: Rausch
Rating 9.2
Heard as one unedited gush, Rausch is a thing of wonder. The experience, especially played through headphones or a great pair of speakers, is overpowering to the point of overload. Wolfgang Voigt starts off slow, with string and horn drones swarming together in a Ligeti-like sunrise. As it moves forward, more sounds and the 4/4 pulse of a kick drum come into view. They don’t necessarily complement what Voigt has set up. They instead move around the edges like counter-rhythms or little intrusions that refuse to let up. —Robert Ham

1. Liz Phair: Girly-Sound to Guyville: ... Boxed Set
Rating 9.4
Taken as a whole, Girly-Sound to Guyville is a dizzying deep dive into Liz Phair’s world before her breakthrough, and at times, it comes off like one of those bulletin boards in a cop drama, covered in photos and colorful push pins, with string connecting the dots. For folks who’ve loved and lived with Phair’s music for the past quarter-century, it will be endlessly fascinating. But even for the unfamiliar, this is a foundational work of indie rock worthy of careful attention. —Ben Salmon

Non Music Related

Dave Itzkoff Delivers a Clear-Eyed Biography of a Remarkable Talent in Robin

By Robert Ham | May 15, 2018 | 4:26pm

BOOKS FEATURES ROBIN WILLIAMS

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Of the few books released in the nearly four years since Robin Williams took his own life, none of them were written by family members or anyone who worked closely with the late actor and comedian. In fact, while he was still alive, there was an air of privacy and protection that hovered over his family and personal life, with details only coming out via the efforts of tabloid journalists. No one close to Williams had dared to cash in on what they know.

That so many of those same people are now opening up to biographer Dave Itzkoff is just one of the remarkable elements of the newly published book Robin. For once, fans are able to get a glimpse into what made Williams tick—his neuroses, boundless energy, generosity, love of both childish things and puerile humor—and get some sense of what may have driven him to perform that final desperate act that ended his life in August of 2014, right from the mouths of the people who knew him best.

robin%20biography%20cover-min.pngItzkoff, a regular contributor to the New York Times, is clearly the right man for this job. He had interviewed Williams a few times and, in doing so, had gotten to know the actor’s family and friends. The pieces Itzkoff wrote were, like much of his profiles and features, clear-eyed and warm, exploring Williams’ creative spirit and the psychological underpinnings that fueled it.

The result of Itzkoff’s interviews with Williams’ children, friends (like Billy Crystal and David Letterman) and folks who worked with the actor during his roller coaster of a career is a portrait of a man haunted by a desperate need for attention and validation. There’s little doubt that Williams enjoyed his years as a standup and a screen presence. But every lost laugh and every film that flopped clearly weighed on the man, no matter how much he tried to shrug it off to the press.

The difficulty comes with trying to both capture every momentous stop on Williams’ journey and his manic stage work. Itzkoff does better with the former, hitting all the highlights while sticking around for the most important mileposts: Mork & Mindy, Dead Poets Society, Good Will Hunting and Williams’ often tumultuous personal life. Itzkoff can only scratch the surface of what made Williams so compelling in words; there’s a sense that he trusts readers to understand references or to at least search YouTube for themselves.

Biographies like Robin, especially one written after a tragic death, unfortunately try to fill in the blanks and answer the questions that its subject left behind. In the case of Williams, it comes down to trying to understand what drove him to end his own life. On that front, Itzkoff stumbles, even as he concludes the book talking about Lewy body disease, a Parkinson’s like disorder that causes hallucinations and paranoia that may have contributed to Williams’ terrible decision. Sprinkled throughout the narrative are little hints: Williams’ distress at learning of someone he knew losing their ability to mentally function, his voracious hunger for the appreciation and affection of everyone and a troubled relationship with his father. All are reasonable suggestions, but without the subject at hand to confirm or deny, it’s pure speculation.

There’s also a troubling thread that runs through the end of the book that damns Susan Schneider, the woman Williams married in 2011 and was with until the end. On the one hand, Itzkoff portrays her as the right person for Williams at the time—a figure who had her own life and interests and didn’t feel the need to follow Williams to film shoots and standup gigs. But as Itzkoff attempts to piece through the shattered life left behind by his subject’s suicide, a nasty tinge enters the prose. Both Itzkoff and Williams’ family members wonder why she wasn’t more open to his children, why she pushed him into rehab a second time as he was struggling with depression, why she fought for her part of the estate in court. Schneider isn’t quoted directly in any instance, with Itzkoff instead pulling from articles and remembrances that she wrote after Williams’ death. To more fully hear her side of the story would have been served this book and its subject so much better.

As a look into Williams’ career, from its steep rise to stardom and its slow, ignominious decline, Robin is as thoughtful as ever. Stuck though he might be on box office receipts and critical reaction to films like Toys and Being Human, Itzkoff tells this story well. For fans of the actor/comedian, Robin is another reminder of what a rare and remarkable talent he was and what an unbelievable shame that it’s gone forever.

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[Edited 6/1/18 12:39pm]

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JoeBala

Kelly Rowland - All I See (New Song)

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Listen: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CQ2B05cc0NI

“Short Court Style”

Three years ago, Natalie Prass’ self-titled debut album appeared like a treasure trove. Gilded and ornate, laden with both R&B swagger and baroque pop embellishments, the Richmond, Virginia singer-songwriter’s breakout effort made a compelling case for her maximalist songwriting. But a lot has happened since 2015, and these days, things are looking less shiny.

Prass had already written her sophomore album when, in November 2016, election results compelled her to scrap it and start fresh. “Short Court Style” is the first single from her rewritten album, The Future and the Past, and it pulses with a new energy and directness.

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Fans of Prass’ debut should set aside expectations of that album’s abundant horns and strings—she’s nixed such florid touches on “Short Court Style.” Instead, the song’s texture is laid down by a deep-set bass groove, twinkly disco synth, and sampled “woo!”s that puncture every break. Prass rides a wave of ecstatic vocal harmonies in and out of the chorus, where she sings plainly about a love that conquers all. In the bridge, words escape her: “Ooh!” she repeats, propelled into the upper reaches of her range by escalating emotion.

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The revelrous funk-pop of “Short Court Style” isn’t necessarily what you would expect from the lead single of an album positioned in response to Trump-era politics. But there’s something striking about Prass’ choice here to protest hatred by championing love, and the straight-ahead language she uses to do it. As she wrote The Future and the Past, Prass felt particularly incensed by systematic silencing of female voices. She’s doing her part to push back, and as an expression of one woman’s unbridled feeling, “Short Court Style” is pretty impossible to tune out.

Natalie Prass, The Future and the Past
The Virginia-born soul-pop singer's second album "pairs the sharp and the smooth, its keenly observed lyrics about love and politics given grounding by arrangements that recall soft-pop highlights from the past four decades," writes Maura Johnston.
Hear: Amazon Music Unlimited | Apple Music | Bandcamp | Spotify | Tidal

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Released today June 1, 2018

Interview: https://www.gq.com/story/...alie-prass

Watch(I could see JJ singing this):

Seeed frontman Demba Nabé has died in Berlin aged 46

The singer of the celebrated German dancehall and reggae band has passed away ahead of a planned Seeed tour, and the potential recording of a new album.

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Demba Nabé, rapper and singer for Berlin band Seeed, has died in the German capital at the age of 46. The musician passed away on Thursday morning, said Christian Schertz, the band's lawyer.

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"Demba's death has hit the band deeply," Schertz told the Tagesspiegel newspaper, adding that Seeed needed time to grieve and that they would not, for now, answer any further questions about the circumstances of Nabé's death.

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A single post was left on the Seeed Facebook page regarding the death of the long-time band member who was born in Berlin in 1972: "We mourn our friend and singer Demba Nabé." An old photo of Nabé, who sang in the group alongside Peter Fox and Frank Dellé, was also published.

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    SEEED FRONTMAN DEMBA NAMBÉ'S MUSICAL LEGACY

    Mourning a friend

    "We mourn our friend and singer Demba Nabé," reads a post left on the Facebook page of band Seeed, who Nabé performed with for 20 years before his sudden death in Berlin on May 31, 2018. Above the note was an old black-and-white photo of Nabé as a youth standing somewhere in the countryside.

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Fans have taken to social media to mark the passing of the acclaimed rapper and singer who had several artist aliases, including Boundzound, the eponymous name for his debut solo album that reached the top 20 in Germany in 2007 — his latest album, Ear, also another one of his pseudonyms, was released in 2011.

But Nabé built his career with Seeed, an 11-member dancehall and reggae band that was famed for high energy live performances since forming in 1998. In 2001, the band released the massive hit song "Dickes B" (Big B), an ode to the city of Berlin. The band have been successful beyond Germany's borders, headlining the likes of Denmark's Roskilde Festival.

The last Seeed album was released in 2012. Titled Seeed, it went straight to number one in the German charts.

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In March this year, band member Peter Fox said the group was working on new material. And last month, Seeed announced a tour for the fall of 2019. According to the Tagesspiegel, several concerts were sold out within 30 minutes, with the online ticket service crashing due to the huge demand.seeed-demba-nabe-gettyimages-175952041-992x560.jpg

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JoeBala

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Regina Spektor Announces Six Special Shows in Australia and North America

Jeff Hahne/Getty Images
Regina Spektor performs at The Fillmore Charlotte on March 17, 2017 in Charlotte, N.C.

Regina Spektor is giving fans a special mini tour this year, with only six shows in Australia and North America to support her seventh studio album Remember Us to Life, released back in Sept. 2016.

Her theatrical indie pop, predominantly supported by her classical piano playing, has garnered acclaim for her albums and live show for well over a decade now. The singer-songwriter, whose "You've Got Time" was written as the theme to the hit Netflix dramedy Orange Is the New Black, will be sharing her whimsical narratives from all of her albums with audiences starting July 8.

Tickets go on sale for the general public Thursday (May 17) at 11am. See the dates for Regina Spektor Live below.

July 8 – Melbourne, AU @ Hamer Hall

July 9 – Sydney, AU @ Sydney Opera House

Aug. 8 – Brooklyn, NY @ Brooklyn Steel

Aug. 11 – Edmonton, AB @ Edmonton Folk Festival

Aug. 19 – Lyons, CO @ Rocky Mountain Folk Festival

Aug. 22 – Los Angeles, CA @ The Theatre at The Ace Hotel

Ari

The 15 Best Salsa Songs Ever: Critic's Picks

Frans Schellekens/Redferns
Celia Cruz performs at the Paradiso in Amsterdam, Netherlands on July 25, 1987.

Hector Lavoe, Marc Anthony, El Gran Combo, Ruben Blades, Sonora Ponceña, Joe Arroyo and more make our tribute to the Latin dance sound that never goes out of style

Trying to sum up a half century of music that is a signature of Latin identity at the same time that it has been embraced by people around the world in one list is not easy. But then again, salsa should feel like the opposite of stress. So, while we can’t tell the entire story of salsa in 15 tracks, we can guarantee that these great classic songs should be part of your essential salsa music playlist.

“Periódico de Ayer,” Hector Lavoe

Hector Lavoe will always be “the voice” of salsa. While Lavoe’s signature “El Cantante” and his Latino anthem “Mi Gente” should also be part of any salsa playlist, we chose “Periódico de Ayer” because it sums up the sound of the Seventies New York salsa scene, and still puts a spell on dancers.

“El Preso,” Fruko y Sus Tesos

Colombian band Fruko y Sus Tesos’ 1975 anthem is the most liberating Salsa song about prison ever recorded.

Fuego en el 23, La Sonora Ponceña

Fusing hard salsa music with fire truck sirens, Puerto Rican group La Sonora Ponceña’s crowd favorite is always caliente.

“Pedro Navaja,” Willie Colon and Rubén Blades

The evergreen crossover hit from the groundbreaking album Sembra features salsa music’s best-known chorus (“La vida te da sorpresas Sorpresas te da la vida, ay dios”).

“Vivir Mi Vida,” Marc Anthony

Marc Anthony’s salsa comeback hit swept the 2014 Billboard Latin Music Awards.

“La Rebelión,” Joe Arroyo

A revisionist history lesson marked by Afro-Latin percussion and punctuated by horns and a traveling piano solo, the great Colombian salsero Joe Arroyo’s 1986 grooving protest song continues to resonate on dance floors throughout Latin America.

“Sin Salsa No Hay Paraiso,” El Gran Combo de Puerto Rico

A 2010 salsa track from the Puerto Rican institution exemplifies the required curriculum of the band known as the “salsa university.”

“Cali Pachanguero,” Grupo Niche

Colombia’s Grupo Niche lend their cool salsa style to this tribute to their home town.

"Toro Mata,” Celia Cruz and Johnny Pacheco

Celia Cruz’s transformation from Cuban singer to “queen of salsa” took place in New York City, where she signed with Fania Records. Like her other fantastic recordings, her rumbafied version of the Afro-Peruvian standard “Toro Mata” with Fania co-founder Johnny Pacheco captured the euphoria of the times.

“Ven, Devorame Otra Vez,” Lalo Rodríguez

Puerto Rican singer Lalo Rodríguez seduced romantic salsa lovers with his 1989 hit “Ven, Devorame Otra Vez.”

“Las Caras Lindas,” Ismael Rivera

Ismael Rivera’s beautiful ode to “my black people,” demonstrates the power of socially-conscious salsa.

“Llorerás,” Oscar D´Leon

The signature song from Venezuela’s salsa star Oscar D’Leon, who adds his unique swing to a Cuban-rooted sound.

“Dile a Ella,” Victor Manuelle

Before he teamed up with urban artists like Farruko and Bad Bunny, Victor Manuelle brought energy to the scene in the 1990s with salsa songs like “Dile a Ella.”

“Conteo Regresivo,” Gilberto Santa Rosa

The “gentleman of salsa” demonstrates his suave approach to the genre on “Conteo Regresivo.”

“Quítate Tú,” Fania All Stars

Every salsa music playlist should include at least one song from the Fania All Stars’ revolutionary 1969 performance at New York’s Cheetah club.

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Tracklist:
01 – My Heart Will Go On (Love Theme from Titanic)
02 – To Love You More (Radio Edit)
03 – Immortality feat.Bee Gees
04 – Falling Into You
05 – The Power of Love (Radio Edit)
06 – It’s All Coming Back to Me Now (Radio Version)
07 – That’s the Way It Is
08 – Pour que tu m’aimes encore
09 – The First Time Ever I Saw Your Face
10 – Think Twice
11 – Because You Loved Me
12 – I Drove All Night
13 – A New Day Has Come (Radio Remix)
14 – Alone
15 – Taking Chances
16 – Loved Me Back to Life
17 – All By Myself (New Edit – 2008)
18 – River Deep, Mountain High

Release Date May 31st.

Halsey Got the Governors Ball Main Stage Smoking With Her Best Hits -- and Actual Fire

Taylor Hill/Getty Images for Governors Ball
Halsey performs onstage during Day 2 of 2018 Governors Ball Music Festival at Randall's Island on June 2, 2018 in New York City.

The ‘Eyes Open’ singer brought pyrotechnics and incredible vocals to her Saturday set.

Halsey’s Gov Ball set on June 2 took place before sundown, but by the time she came out (at 6:52 PM) a more than sizable crowd had gathered. To kick things off, an enormous white curtain that covered the whole stage was dramatically ripped away, and the pop singer launched into an energetic performance of “Eyes Closed.”

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Though she had just one backup dancer, Halsey managed to fill the stage with her strong voice, and by strutting around in a red bikini and iridescent cargo pants. A staircase on stage flickered with light in time with the beat, and periodically, pyrotechnics and smoke cannon jets came into play, elevating the otherwise minimalist set. During “Castle,” orange lights glowed behind the smoke, making it look like the whole stage was aflame.

Halsey also gave her LGBTQ friends and fans a shout-out before performing the Lauren Jauregui-assisted hit “Strangers.”

“June is pride month. If you are a proud member of the LGBT community, or a proud friend of someone who is, you gotta...you gotta...dance,” she yelled. While Jauregui didn’t make an appearance for the duet, Halsey held her own as visuals of diverse couples kissing played on the screen behind her.

Halsey performs onstage during Day 2 of 2018 Governors Ball Music Festival at Randall&#39;s Island on June 2, 2018 in New York City.
Taylor Hill/Getty Images for Governors Ball
Halsey performs onstage during Day 2 of 2018 Governors Ball Music Festival at Randall's Island on June 2, 2018 in New York City.

The singer later shared an emotional anecdote about her career. “This is a particularly special day for me for a couple reasons. The first is that today is the one-year anniversary of my second platinum-certified album hopeless foundation kingdom,” she began. “The second thing is a little bit of a story. Four years ago on this day, I signed my record deal. I had one song, and I signed a very small deal for a very little bit of money and just crossed my fingers that it would work the fuck out,” she continued.

Halsey explained that after signing the deal — on top of the Empire State Building — she got in the elevator and raced downstairs to get over to Gov Ball at Randall's Island.

“I was standing somewhere in the back, just like you,” she said, concluding: “If there’s something you want to do, just fucking do it, make it yours.”


Rick Astley / Beautiful Life

Exclusive signed editions and bundles available

Eighties pop icon Rick Astley follows up his 2016 number one album, 50, with a new 12-track long-player Beautiful Life.

The album has been “written, produced and played” by Rick and it’s being issued across a number of formats, many exclusive to Rick’s own store.


The Beautiful Life super deluxe bundle

These include a SIGNED deluxe CD with hardcover book and Rankin photography and a super deluxe edition bundle which includes an exclusive vinyl picture disc, the black vinyl, the signed deluxe CD, another exclusive in a signed Rankin print (and a cassette!) The £30 bundle seems like particularly good value, as it drops the picture disc but includes everything else in the super deluxe, including both signed items.

Any purchase gives you 48-hour ticket pre-sale access to Rick’s forthcoming UK tour, which starts in October. Amazon in the UK also have a standard CD with Rick’s autograph on it, if you wish to do ‘signed’ on a budget!

The album Beautiful Life is out on 20 July 2018.

1. Beautiful Life
2. Chance to Dance
3. She Makes Me
4. Shivers
5. Last Night on Earth
6. Every Corner
7. I Need the Light
8. Better Together
9. Empty Heart
10. Rise Up
11. Try
12. The Good Old Days


Rolling Stones: The Studio Albums Vinyl Collection 1971-2016 video preview

The forthcoming Rolling Stones Studio Albums Vinyl Collection 1971-2016 box set on display, in the Rolling Stones ‘pop-up shop’ in London’s Selfridges.

Sadly, the pop-up shop closes today, so no point in trying to pop down there now, but it’s definitely interesting to see this box up close.

A couple of things to note. First off, the box set is the type with a ‘drawer’ which slides into the outer slipcase. The drawer appears to be laid on its side in the rotating display at Selfridges, but you will see the die-cut ‘lips’ motif is part of the design. The outer box has lenticular ‘lips’ on the front and stylised album titles on the back, with 15 different colour variants of the ‘lips’ design (representing each of the 15 albums) on the spine.

Don’t forget, this is a 20LP box set with everything half-speed remastered and each album comes with a download card for “HD digital redemption” of the catalogue. The original packaging has been replicated, so Some Girls includes the 20 cut-outs on the cover, the sleeve of Sticky Fingers features a working zip and Exile On Main Street comes with a set of 12 original postcard inserts.

The Studio Albums Vinyl Collection 1971-2006 is released on 15 June 2018.

Laura Carbone Goes the Emotional Distance With 'Empty Sea' (album stream)

Jedd Beaudoin
Photo: Julia Beyer

COVERING A WIDE RANGE OF STYLES AND EMOTIONS, LAURA CARBONE'S LATEST ALBUM, EMPTY SEA, IS A LIGHT IN THE DARKNESS.

Laura Carbone's latest, Empty Sea, is out now and spotlights the acclaimed singer's knack for creating dark, emotionally charged music that is at times reminiscent of Mazzy Star at its most ethereal but which packs an emotional punch that is all its own. "Grace" marches and charges in all the right ways, rising to an emotional climax that a lesser artist would have allowed to become a wash of noise. Carbone instead leaves strong definition between her voices and the wall of distorted guitars and crashing bass. The impact is immeasurable, potent.

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Elsewhere on the record there's a danger that lurks: post-punk never sounded as charged or bold as "Cellophane Skin", goth never as disturbing as "Nightride" and noise never as noisy as "Crisis". Comparisons to My Bloody Valentine, Sonic Youth and Patti Smith seem inevitable but each seems incapable of fully capturing the urgency and originality of what Carbone offers on Empty Sea, a highly expressive and deeply moving listening experience that speaks to the frustrations of the now and of all time.

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Tracklist

1 Grace 4:15
2 Cellophane Skin 2:58
3 The Empty Sea 3:30
4 Nightride 3:42
5 Old Leaves Shiver 4:30
6 Crisis 2:09
7 Tangerine Tree 4:40
8 Whos gonna safe you 4:40
9 Lullaby

Listen: https://www.youtube.com/w...OsNckSDoyg

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https://www.youtube.com/w...PZAg9GBB7Y

Jo Harman : People We Become

Free Download: https://noisetrade.com/jo...-we-become

Born in Luton, England, Harman grew up in the Devon village of Lustleigh, before moving to London to study for a BA Performing Arts.[1] After travelling to India, following the death of her father, she attended Brighton Institute of Modern Music in Brighton.[2] In 2011, she self-released Live at Hideaway, whilst she developed her songcraft toward making a debut studio album.[3]

This got the attention of Live Nation in the region and Harman's first gig in Europe was to 7,000 people opening for The Cranberries both in Europe and in the UK. While opening for them, she played a number of multi-genre festivals, including the Cheltenham Jazz Festival and the Isle of Wight Festival. Her second album, Dirt on My Tongue, was released in 2013. Harman's song to her father, "Sweet Man Moses", was nominated as best composition at the 2012 British Blues Awards and this was followed by "Worthy of Love" being nominated in the same category the following year, together with a "Best Female Singer" nomination.[4][5]

In 2014, she and her bandmates in "Jo Harman and Company" were nominated for seven British Blues Awards. She appeared at BluesFest where her performance was recorded by the BBCand released as a live album.[6] Harman has worked with members of Average White Band.[7]

In February 2017, she released her second studio album, People We Become. The first single from the album, "When We Were Young", featuring backup vocals from Michael McDonald, achieved BBC Radio 2 playlist status.[8]

Watch:https://www.youtube.com/w...g_wXBeINqs

Jade Bird photographed on May 7, 2018 at Dean Street Studios in Brooklyn, New York.
Jade Bird photographed on May 7, 2018 at Dean Street Studios in Brooklyn, New York.
Samantha Casolari

Chartbreaker: How Rising U.K. Star Jade Bird Found Americana & Hit The Songwriting 'Lottery'

by Tatiana Cirisano
May 21, 2018, 5:59pm EDT

Chartbreaker is Billboard's monthly series spotlighting an artist making their introduction to the charts.

“I’m a real big fan of words,” says Jade Bird with a giggle, speaking over the phone from a tour bus en route to Portland, Ore. The 20-year-old British singer-songwriter is becoming known on stages across the Atlantic as the class clown of live performers, but when it comes to her career, she’s far more serious. Inspired in her early teens by Americana-based songwriting of The Civil Wars, Johnny Cash and Bob Dylan, Bird now prides in writing the kind of sharp, lean lyricism she says you “can’t shatter with an axe.”

Take her breakthrough hit “Lottery,” which released earlier this year. The folksy, guitar-helmed track follows a (somewhat real) barside conversation between Bird and an ex, propelled by hyper-specific references like the pub’s real address and a soaring chorus: “You used to tell me / Love is a lottery, but / You’ve got your numbers / And you’re betting on me.” The song itself has been posting numbers: “Lottery” previously spent three weeks atop Adult Alternative Songs (it settles at No. 3 this week), making her one of only five solo women to command the chart as a lead act since 2010.

Jade Bird photographed on May 7, 2018 at Dean Street Studios in Brooklyn, New York.
Samantha Casolari
Jade Bird photographed on May 7, 2018 at Dean Street Studios in Brooklyn, New York.

Looking back, though, it’s fortuitous that Bird stumbled into the alternative, Americana-inspired lane at all. Though born in Hexham, a small town in England known for its farmers’ markets, she traveled through Europe often with her father in the military. Her young parents (her mother had her around age 20) favored EDM pioneers like Aphex Twin and the Chemical Brothers, which Bird remembers them blasting in the car, much to her grandmother’s annoyance: “The music was so loud, it vibrated the whole driveway.”

While she got an early taste of country from her grandmother (“‘Cotton-Eyed Joe’ was my jam when I was three,” she jokes), it wasn’t until middle school that Bird discovered her now longtime favorites like Neil Young, Bob Dylan and Crosby, Stills & Nash through a family friend. At the time, her parents were going through a divorce, and Bird found comfort in blues. “A theme [in my songwriting] was the breakdown of relationships -- my family was going through a similar narrative,” she explains. “The first song I ever wrote that I liked was called ‘When You’re Alone.’” She sings the somber first verse into the phone -- “Do you think of me when you’re alone?”


By 16, Bird settled in South Wales with her mother, where she began gigging at London pubs after school. Going up against “big, burly guys” onstage wasn’t easy, but she credits those early experiences for her natural (and often silly) stage presence today. She even shouts-out her favorite venue, a rustic Ferdinand Street haunt, in the first verse of “Lottery.” “I’ve never had an audience I couldn’t relate to,” she explains. “Live, I just tend to connect.”


Around the same age, Bird found an unlikely muse in the “fighting spirit” of Americana heroes from Johnny Cash to Chris Stapleton. In fact, her entire debut EP Something American, which she recorded with producer Simone Felice (The Lumineers, Bat For Lashes) in the Catskill Mountains of New York, is a love letter to the genre. The title track’s chorus says it all: “We're all reaching for something American,” Bird sings wistfully, connecting romantic ideals to the ethos of the American dream. Early demos caught the attention of Daniel Glass last year, who signed her to his Glassnote Records in March 2017, releasing her full EP four months later.

Jade Bird photographed on May 7, 2018 at Dean Street Studios in Brooklyn, New York.
Samantha Casolari
Jade Bird photographed on May 7, 2018 at Dean Street Studios in Brooklyn, New York.

Ever since, Bird has taken flight. She played her first U.S. festival at Stagecoach in Indio, Calif. last month, and recently kicked off a summer run in the states supporting First Aid Kit, Anderson East and Colter Wall. She’ll stop by festivals including Bonnaroo, Firefly, and Mountain Jam along the way. As she tours, she’s working on her yet-untitled debut album, finding inspiration in everything from books (Patti Smith’s Just Kids is her “holy bible”) to everyday conversations: “I [left] an airport and someone said, ‘You always bring the rain,’ so I wrote a song called [that].”

Contrary to her bubbly personality, though, her favorite moment onstage is the quietest. Often, while performing an acoustic cover or piano ballad, Bird revels in the hush that comes over the crowd. It’s a sign she’s doing something right. “I never get nervous, but I get shifty, like, ‘Am I going to do a good job?’” she says. “That’s the more meaningful moment for me-- when I can silence a room.”

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Janet Jackson Teases New Music With Studio Photo

Janet-in-teases-new-music

Janet Jackson tore the 2018 Billboard Awards stage up a few weeks ago when she performed and accepted the Icon award, but her musical reign hasn’t ended yet.

The 52-year-old is a living legend who’s still in the creative mindset to continue her established legacy. Jackson recently posted a photo of herself in the studio hard at work making musical magic once again.

Janet spoke to Billboard Magazine last week about creating new music. She was secretive about her new project, but she divulged that her creative process is inspired by life.

She says:

“I’m not trying to avoid the question and be secretive, but the truth is that I don’t try to analyze the creative process while it’s still ongoing. I’m very intuitive about writing. Anything can inspire me. This morning, I saw this lovely elderly Japanese woman walking down the streets of Hollywood wearing an adorable bonnet with bright red flowers. She might be a song. I remembered an especially painful chapter in my early life last night before going to bed. That might be a song. I woke up this morning and heard a bird chirping in a rhythm that captivated my heart. Maybe that will turn into a new groove. Like everyone else, my feelings are fluid. My ideas are fleeting. I like to keep it that way. I can’t decide in advance what a song or an album concept will be. I have to let those songs and concepts come to me rather than chase them down.”

Janet’s new music will follow her 2015 album, Unbreakable.

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Alina Baraz Preps North American Tour (Dates)

alina-baraz-tour

Rising singer Alina Baraz is giving fans the gift of live performance with a North American trek aptly titled “The Tour.”

Since 2015, Baraz (along with Danish producer Galimatias) has been wowing R&B music lovers with the release of their Urban Flora EP. Since then, the Cleveland, Ohio bred singer’s 2017 collaboration with Khalid, “Electric,” sent more shock-waves into the ethers, growing her underground fan base even more. But it’s her 9-track April 2018 project The Color Of You that warranted a fall trek.

Image result for Urban Flora EP

Set to embark on September 6th in Houston, TX, “The Tour” will stop in major markets such as New York City, Atlanta, Philadelphia, Detroit, L.A., and more before wrapping up on Oct. 24th in San Diego.

Image result for Alina Baraz on stage

Check out http://www.alinabaraz.com/ for tour dates and for presale tickets using the password “alinaseason.”

See the full tour schedule below:

alina-baraz-tour-2

Mariah Carey is ‘Hopeful and Optimistic’ About Mental Health Battle

mariah-carey-mental-illness

Music icon Mariah Carey is remaining as optimistic as she continues to tackle mental health problems.

Earlier this year, Carey revealed that she was battling with bipolar II disorder that left her experiencing insomnia and feeling manic.

In an interview with U.K. TV show Lorraine on Monday, the star updated fans on her illness, insisting that she’s only human and she’s “hopeful and optimistic.”

“The thing that some people don’t realize, before all this started, we were all just people,” she said. “Everybody has their own stuff that they deal with, grew up dealing with, just any type of adversity that you have to overcome. We all go through things and that’s part of life. The main thing is to stay hopeful and optimistic, I think.”

Carey spoke with People magazine about her bipolar fight earlier this year that she had initially dismissed her problems and carried on working.

“For a long time I thought I had a severe sleep disorder,” she said. “But it wasn’t normal insomnia and I wasn’t lying awake counting sheep. I was working and working and working … I was irritable and in constant fear of letting people down. It turns out that I was experiencing a form of mania. Eventually, I would just hit a wall.”

Carey says she has now found the right “balance” in life and is working on a new album, playing a Las Vegas residency, and will once again bring her Christmas shows to Europe in December.

Fans to Celebrate Prince's 60th Birthday With Minnesota Festival

Three-day gathering to feature 'Purple Rain' location bus tours, screening of 1984 film, meet-and-greets with Prince's family and more

Prince fans plan to celebrate the late icon's 60th birthday with a three-day gathering in Henderson, Minnesota. Jeff Baenen/AP/REX/Shutterstock

A group of Prince fans plan to celebrate the late icon's 60th birthday with a three-day gathering in Henderson, Minnesota, near where scenes from Purple Rain were filmed.

High-tech effects, Madonna and Bruce Springsteen cameos, Olympic-level choreography – members of the Revolution look back on their shining moment

Minnesota resident Joel King, who served as a camera operator on Prince's Graffiti Bridge and several music videos, is co-organizing the event, which will feature bus tours of Purple Rainlocations, a screening of the 1984 film and performances by local musicians, the Mankato Free Press reports.

Despite a population under 1,000 people, Henderson, Minnesota is already the home of a street dubbed "Purple Rain Road" and a stone bench dedicated to Prince, who resided at Paisley Park in Chanhassen, Minnesota outside of the Twin Cities.

The free gathering begins on June 7th, which would have been Prince's 60th birthday. The legendary artist died of an accidental overdose in April 2016 at the age of 57. The festival also promises appearances by "secret guests" associated with Prince and a meet-and-greet with members of Prince's family. Additionally, donations from the three-day festival will go toward the painting of a mural of Prince leaning against a "little red corvette."

The Prince estate recently partnered with Roots drummer Questlove for an orchestral tour this fall, "4U: A Symphonic Celebration of Prince."

Hear Lucie Silvas' Empowering New Song 'Kite'

Anthemic, rock-tinged tune is first taste of British singer-songwriter's new LP, 'E.G.O.'Image result for Lucie Silvas

"Kite" is the first release from 'E.G.O.,' the fourth album by British-born and Nashville-based artist Lucie Silvas. RMV/REX/Shutterstock

Lucie Silvas, whose rafter-shattering vocals and genre-defying musical landscapes distinguished her 2015 album, Letters to Ghosts, returns with her latest LP, E.G.O., out August 24th. The British-born singer-songwriter co-wrote all of the 12 tracks on E.G.O., which is an acronym for "Everybody Gets Off."

"Always on My Mind" gets two different treatments for the Forever Country series

Writers and collaborators on the new record include Ian Fitchuk, Daniel Tashian, Natalie Hemby, Ruston Kelly, Gabe Simon, JD McPherson and the singer's husband, John Osborne, one half of the duo Brothers Osborne. Silvas has toured extensively in the last several years supporting country artists including Chris Stapleton, Miranda Lambert and Little Big Town.

The first track released from the new album is "Kite," a fierce, rocking girl-power anthem built on ringing guitars and Silvas' potent, soaring vocals.

"I wanted to capture a woman's inability to be held down," Silvas tells Billboard of the song's high-flying metaphor. "That even without any real sense of direction of where she is going, she wants to be free to just go wherever the wind takes her. Her spirit can get her in trouble sometimes, but it's what keeps her feeling alive."

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Silvas will be on tour throughout the U.S. in the coming months, including appearances at the Seven Peaks Festival in Colorado in late July featuring Dierks Bentley and more. She's also set for Austin City Limits Music Festival in early October. E.G.O. is now available for pre-order.

Lucie Silvas, "E.G.O."

E.G.O. track listing:

1. "Kite"​
2. "Girls From California"
3. "Smoking Your Weed​"
4. "I Want You All to Myself"​
5. "Black Jeans"​
6. "First Rate Heartbreak"​
7. "Everything Looks Beautiful​"
8. "People Can Change"​
9. "My Old Habits​"
10. "Just For the Record"​
11. "E.G.O.​"
12. "Change My Mind"​

Listen: https://soundcloud.com/th...e-mastered

CLOVES drops new single 'Wasted Time': Stream


CLOVES drops new single 'Wasted Time': Stream

The Aussie singer/songwriter will also be touring in support of Greta Van Fleet later this summer and will also be working on her full-length album 'One Big Nothing'.

CLOVES, the acclaimed London via-Melbourne singer/songwriter, just dropped her new single, 'Wasted Time' via Interscope Records. The moody, haunting song was co-written by CLOVES and Justin Parker.

“'Wasted Time’ is about that inner voice that tells you mid-conversation with someone that maybe you’re boring them or they don’t like you," CLOVES says.

"‘The only place I wanna go is anywhere there’s people I don’t know’" is one of my favorite lyrics. To truly find self-confidence and self-esteem is difficult for many people, myself included. It takes constant w to not be self-critical. ‘Wasted Time’ is about those internal conversations.” Listen to the track below.

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'Wasted Time' follows the single 'Bringing the House Down', which was released earlier this year and produced by Ariel Rechtshaid (HAIM, Adele, Vampire Weekend).

The track was also accompanied by a music video directed by Sophie Muller (Beyoncé, Coldplay, Gwen Stefani). The prestigious Mahogany Session recently featured an intimate, live version of 'Bringing the House Down'.

Image result for Band CLOVES

CLOVES will be touring the globe kicking off this weekend at London’s All Points East Festival, alongside The XX, Lorde and LCD Soundsystem among others. Additional international festival appearances include Bergenfest in Norway (Father John Misty, Pale Waves, James Bay) PinkPop in the Netherlands (Foo Fighers, Bruno Mars, Noel Gallagher) and Electric Picnic in Ireland (Kendrick Lamar, Massive Attack, Dua Lipa).

CLOVES will also headline shows in Europe and the UK, as well as her native- Australia, before making her way stateside for a sold-out tour supporting classic rock revivalists Great Van Fleet in July. Scroll down to see the full schedule of tour dates.

Meanwhile, the Aussie singer/songwriter will also be hitting the studio as she's confirmed via press release that she is prepping for her full-length debut album release, 'One Big Nothing' coming later this summer on Interscope Records. To stay abreast with CLOVES, follow her on Twitter and Instagram.

" target="_blank">https://www.youtube.com/watch?time_continue=52&v=ulaOcjcSzVA

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https://www.youtube.com/w...-q4aSM_Yb4

CLOVES support dates with Greta Van Fleet

July 3 - Armony Minneapolis, MN
July 6 - Rebel Complex Toronto, CANADA
July 8 - Rebel Complex Toronto, CANADA
July 18 - Stage AE Outdoors Pittsburgh, PA
July 20 - 930 Club Washington DC
July 21 - The Anthem Washington DC
July 23 - House of Blues Boston, MA
July 24 - House of Blues Boston, MA

Haley Reinhart's "Last Kiss Goodbye" Has All Of Your Favorite Things

PHOTO: COURTESY OF JOSHUA SCHULTZ
Welcome to The Drop, Refinery29's home for exclusive music video premieres. We want to shine the spotlight on women artists whose music inspires, excites, and (literally) moves us. This is where we'll champion their voices.
Haley Reinhart's new song "Last Kiss Goodbye" is the CoverGirl of music: It's easy, breezy, and beautiful. This is a far cry from the striated pop that shows up in the Spotify Top Hits playlist. It's simple. The video, which premieres today exclusively with Refinery29, is just as simple: Reinhart dances around the canals in Venice Beach, flirting with the camera. Reinhart tells Refinery29 herself that it's meant to be stripped down. Actually, "Last Kiss Goodbye" isn't meant to be anything, much like an actual last kiss goodbye, the last peck before the real, crushing goodbye hits. She tells me that she recorded the song with a hand mic, a guitar, and not much else.
"We just kinda left it really super raw," Reinhart says over the phone. "I wanted to give my fanbase and any new audience out there a chance to get to know me as a raw artist who can do a pop and also a jazzier feel." The track has a bossa nova swing, but Reinhart's vocals — showcased on season 10 of American Idol — have the lilt of low-fi pop.\\\
Much has been made of Reinhart's vocals over the years. A unique blend of throaty and nimble, it's the perfect vehicle for creative covers. A YouTube video of Reinha...d's "Creep" with the group Postmodern Jukebox went viral in 2015, garnering over 48 million views. Reinhart worked and toured with Postmodern Jukebox for years, lending her voice to songs such as "Seven Nation Army" and "Black Hole Sun."
Image result for Haley Reinhart on stage 2018
In both her covers and her original music, Reinhart has leaned on the strength and the power in her voice — in "Baby It's You," a track from her 2017 album What's That Sound?, Reinhart showcases a Joplinesque sound, wailing, "Don't want nobody" at the top of her range. But "Last Kiss Goodbye" is notably restrained. Reinhart dances near the top of her range in a tired, almost bored falsetto. The result is something a little, well, summery.
"I was really hoping that we would release the song in the summer, because it totally has a summer vibe going on," she says. A summer song, by her definition, should "really let your voice travel out into the distance." It should be so simple, she says, that "people can really catch onto the melody and sing along with it."
And it's not just the beachiness of the video that makes it summery. "As far as the video goes, from taking a stroll with your loved one, or like, swinging on swings, or rolling around in the sand...I wanted to put all my favorite things in it — from all those things to roses and the sunshine and the canal," Reinhart says. "It's that feeling of, you don't know exactly where you are, but it's where you want to be."
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That's actually a good metaphor for where Reinhart is herself. A self-described "entertainer," Reinhart is a modern artist in that she straddles a few disciplines. She's pop, she's jazz, and, as of 2015, she's a voice actress on the Netflix sitcom F is for Family. She's also straddling personal artistry with the television-owned fame that comes with appearing on American Idol. (Reinhart didn't win, but she was a fan favorite.) "It's really important for me to break away, as much as I totally respect and honor where I come from and my roots," she says. "[But] also to take a step forward and move into your own light as an artist." Reinhart's light, like "Last Kiss Goodbye," might not be in any specific place, but it's right where she wants to be.
Watch the full music video for "Last Kiss Goodbye," below.

Watch:

https://www.youtube.com/w...trhxHiqXT4

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Legendary Spanish Singer Maria Dolores Pradera Dead at 93

Gianni Ferrari/Cover/Getty Images
Maria Dolores Pradera photographed in Madrid, Spain in 1985.

Maria Dolores Pradera was known for her classic renditions of Latin standards.

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María Dolores Pradera, the Spanish actress and singer known for her deep voice and her memorable renditions of Latin and Spanish standards like “Procuro olvidarte,” “Ojalá que te vaya bonito” and “La flor de la canela,” died this morning (May 29) in her native Madrid. She was 93 years old.

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An elegant woman of classic beauty, known for her theatrical renditions of songs, Pradera remained relevant for decades, performing actively until she was almost 90 years old. And although she was a Spaniard through and through, Pradera gained international fame thanks to her readings of Latin standards -- from Peruvian waltzes to Mexican rancheras -- that also made her a beloved figure in Latin America.

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Her last album, a duet set titled Gracias a vosotro (Thanks to You), was released in 2012 and included duets with the likes of Joan Manuel Serrat, Joaquín Sabina, Ana Belén, Diego El Cigala, Miguel Poveda and Pablo Alborán. The latter, only 28 years old, posted a video with Pradera released in 2013 as part of “Gracias a vosotros,” when she was close to 90 years old.

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“Rest in peace, maestra. Thanks for so much,” wrote Alborán, one of Spain’s leading young acts. Many others have taken to Twitter to remember Pradera, too. “Let that bolero she sang keep playing forever,” Alejandro Sanz wrote. “En entire life giving truth. We will miss you,” popstar Malú wrote.

Que ese bolero que nos cantó siga sonando por siempre. DEP Maestra María Dolores Pradera.

Toda una vida regalando verdad... Te vamos a echar de menos...
DEP María Dolores Pradera

Eddy Clearwater, 83, dies: An eclectic Chicago bluesman brought a rock vibe to the music

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Chicago blues musician Eddy Clearwater at his home in Skokie in 2011. (Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune)

When Eddy “The Chief” Clearwater roared onto a stage, listeners were startled by what they saw and heard.

As if his gutsy guitar playing and growling vocals weren’t enough, Clearwater loved to wade into the crowd or don his beloved Indian headdress or duck-walk across the stage in homage to his early hero, Chuck Berry.

He offered his singular brand of showmanship for the last time on May 19, when he played to a packed house at Buddy Guy’s Legends, in the South Loop, said his longtime friend and publicist, Lynn Orman Weiss.

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“He was in true form that night,” said Orman Weiss of the two sets Clearwater performed. “His guitar playing was nonstop. He started at 11 p.m. and went all the way till 2 in the morning, closing time.”

Clearwater died of heart failure Friday in his Skokie home at age 83, according to Orman Weiss and Alligator Records, a Chicago label for which Clearwater recorded.

“Eddy was one of the premier West Side Chicago blues musicians of his generation, along with people like Magic Sam, Otis Rush and Freddie King,” said Bruce Iglauer, founder and president of Alligator Records.

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“He was really the last of the generation of West Side guitar players who modernized the blues in the 1950s and very much carried on their legacy, performing not only his own original songs but also songs by Magic Sam and Otis Rush in particular. He never got quite as much acclaim as the others, but he was definitely in the same league.”

Said Chicago blues musician Lurrie Bell, “His singing was great, and I liked his style of playing lead guitar — the way he chorded. His chord progressions were unusual.”

A great deal about Clearwater’s art was unorthodox, for he created an eclectic music from the Southern roots he shared with so many blues artists who migrated to Chicago in the middle of the 20th century, as he did.

Like them, Clearwater — born Edward Harrington in Macon, Miss., on Jan. 10, 1935 — grew up in rural poverty and was beguiled by the music around him.

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“I used to hear my uncles singing blues while they were working in the fields,” he told the Tribune in 2011. “And I would ask them: ‘What does that song mean? Like the “Catfish Blues”?’

“It’s about the human condition. They were singing while working and plowing and picking cotton and pulling corn. I would try to imitate what they were singing. Then, later on, my uncle (Rev. Houston Harrington) bought a guitar, and once in a while he’d let me pick it up and see if I could make chords. I was about 10 or 11 years old. I’d hear my uncles do stuff, and I’d be able to figure out little notes and melodies.”

In this way he taught himself to play the guitar, “left-handed and upside down,” as Orman Weiss put it.

Image result for Eddy âThe Chiefâ Clearwater

When his uncle opened a country cafe with a jukebox, “I heard Louis Jordan sing and play, (and) I could see him onstage, I could visualize him,” Clearwater recalled. “And I said to myself at that point, ‘That’s what I want to do. I want to be a guitar player or a singer.’ I had to be about 12 or 13.”

The family moved to Birmingham, Ala., in 1948, when he was 13, and in 1950 the nascent musician headed to Chicago (at his uncle’s invitation). He toiled as a dishwasher and crooned in gospel groups, soon working West and South side blues clubs as Guitar Eddy. He cut his first singles, “Hill Billy Blues” and “A-minor Cha Cha,” in the late 1950s on his uncle’s Atomic H label as Clear Waters — an obvious response to the fame of Muddy Waters — which eventually became Clearwater.

The rock ’n’ roll revolution of Chuck Berry galvanized Clearwater, who studied the master’s work closely.

Image result for young Eddy âThe Chiefâ Clearwater

Lonnie Brooks used to say that at one point he sounded more like Chuck Berry than Chuck Berry did,” said Chicago blues musician Billy Branch, referring to the Chicago blues legend who died last year at age 83.

Clearwater, added Branch, “Brought a rock ’n’ roll and Chuck Berry kind of vibe to the blues.”

That distinguished Clearwater from many colleagues, as did his embrace of his Native American heritage.

“I’ve always been very fond of the American Indians, and I happen to be part Indian, anyway — Cherokee,” Clearwater told the Tribune in 2014. “My grandmother was full-blooded Cherokee.

“I was playing at a club in Westmont (in the 1970s), there was a bartender … and she invited me and my band to her house one night for a party after the club had closed. So we went by, and I walked in her house, and hanging up in her den she had a headdress, a full elegant headdress.”

Clearwater immediately asked to buy it, but the woman instead gave it to him as “a good luck charm,” he recalled.

It appeared to work its powers, for in 1980 Clearwater released his first full-length LP, “The Chief” (on Chicago’s Rooster Blues Records label), the album launching him as an international artist.

Clearwater clearly had evolved well beyond his early Chuck Berry impersonation to incorporate rockabilly, R&B and more.

“I’d take a little bit of this pattern and style and try and put it with something else, blend it together to see if it fits,” he said in the 2011 Tribune interview.

It surely did, Clearwater binding these disparate influences through force of personality and exuberance of performance manner. He went on to record more than 15 albums as leader. “Rock ’N’ Roll City” (on Bullseye Blues & Jazz, 2003) earned a Grammy nomination for best traditional blues album; “West Side Strut” (Alligator, 2008) inspired extended international touring.

“Soul Funky,” recorded live at SPACE in Evanston (for Clearwater’s Cleartone label, 2014) was his last album.

To the end, Clearwater never tired of the recording studio, the stage or his audience.

On the eve of a 79th birthday show at SPACE that became the “Soul Funky” album, he marveled at the durability of his career.

“Before I reached 79, I never thought about it too much,” Clearwater told the Tribune.

“Now that I’ve reached the age, I figured, I guess I’m still playing at 79. I’m still enjoying it.

“It feels good to still be on the stage and hopefully making someone happy.”

Clearwater is survived by his wife, Renee Greenman Harrington Clearwater; children and grandchildren. Services will be held at 11 a.m. Tuesday at Chicago Jewish Funerals, 8851 Skokie Blvd., Skokie.

Eddy "The Chief" Clearwater: The Blues Warrior

During the 1950s, Chicago's West Side was a breeding ground for some of the world's greatest bluesmen. Magic Sam, Otis Rush, Freddie King and others ruled the clubs. With his fierce guitar playing, soulful and emotive vocals and wild stage shows, Eddy "The Chief" Clearwater easily belongs on this list. A Chicago legend, Clearwater is an intense, flamboyant blues-rocking showman. He's equally comfortable playing the deepest, most heartfelt blues or rocking, good-time party music. The blues world recognized his talent by giving him the Blues Music Award for Contemporary Blues – Male Artist of the Year in 2001. His release, 2003's Rock ‘N' Roll City, was nominated for a Grammy Award.

Born Edward Harrington (a cousin of late harpist Carey Bell Harrington) on January 10, 1935 in Macon, Mississippi, Eddy and his family moved to Birmingham, Alabama in 1948. With music from blues to gospel to country & western surrounding him from an early age, Eddy taught himself to play guitar (left-handed and upside down), and began performing with various gospel groups, including the legendary Five Blind Boys of Alabama. After moving to Chicago in 1950, Eddy stayed with an uncle and took a job as a dishwasher. Quickly though, through his uncle's contacts, he met many of Chicago's blues stars. Eddy fell deeper under the spell of the blues, and under the wing of blues star Magic Sam, who would become one of Eddy's closest friends and teachers.
By 1953, as Guitar Eddy, he was making a strong name for himself, working the South and West Side bars regularly. He met and befriended everyone from Sunnyland Slim to Earl Hooker, picking up licks and lessons along the way. After hearing Chuck Berry in 1957, Eddy added that rock and roll element to his already searing blues style, creating a unique sound that defines him to this day.

Twice during the 1970s he toured Europe (the first time with Buddy Guy and Junior Wells) and even appeared on BBC television in England. His first full-length LP, 1980's The Chief, was the initial release on Chicago's Rooster Blues label. Wearing a full Indian headdress on the cover (an homage to his Cherokee blood), The Chief, as he was now known, reached the largest audience of his career. Recording numerous albums for various labels during the 1980s and 1990s, "West Side Strut" (2008) was the first album in Alligator Records for "The Chief". Eddy's star continued to rise.


Interview by Michael Limnios


Mr. Clearwater, what first attracted you to the Blues & what does the BLUES mean to you?

Sound of the music and its depth. Blues is the music of the truth which is called everyday living.


"Be as consistent as possible and practice any chance you get."

What does the BLUES offered you? Give a wish for the BLUES

Consolation. Wish for it to continue and have a bigger presence.


How do you describe your sound & your progress? What characterizes the sound of “The Chief”?

Energetic and soulful. Sound of the Chief is happiness, joy, and a gutsy sound.


What experiences in your life make you a GOOD musician?

Consistency. Show up and so the best job you can possibly do. You don't have to be the best musician. You have to be consistent and show up.

"Energetic and soulful. Sound of the Chief is happiness, joy, and a gutsy sound."

Which is the most interesting period in your life?

Touring in West Africa. Getting to meet and play with African musicians.


... most memorable gigs?

Turkey and France.


Do you have any amusing tales to tell of your gigs in Europe with Buddy & Wells?

Buddy and JR. were very comical. They joked and teased each other non stop.


Are there any memories from South and West Side bars at 50s which you’d like to share with us?

60's, saw Otis Rush at the Castle Rock on the west side, and Magic Sam on the south side.


Do you remember any interesting or funny stories from the recording time?

No, just hard work. Duke Robillard was a joy to work with.


Why did you think that Eddie Clearwater continues to generate such a devoted following?

Consistency and a desire to relate to people.

"Sound of the music and its depth. Blues is the music of the truth which is called everyday living."


Some music styles can be fads but the blues is always with us. Why do think that is?

Because of the foundation and depth of it. It is the music of heart and soul.


How did you first meet Magic Sam, How did you get together and where did it start?

Magic Sam. I went to see Magic San at Club Blue Flame in Chicago, and he broke a guitar string. He asked if anyone had an E-1st string, and I ran home and brought back two strings.


What kind of a guy was Magic Sam? Which memory from him makes you smile?

He was a very friendly person and warmhearted person and easy to talk to. He told joked between songs which were really funny.

Of all the people you've meet, who do you admire the most?

Chuck Berry

Which was the best moment of your career and which was the worst?

Best is when I met my wife Reneé, and the worse when I was catching a train to Hamburg, Germany.

The train took off before I could get my equipment on the train. I rode to the next town and trained back to where I started from, and surprisingly my equipment was still on the platform.


What do you think is the characteristic of you personality that made you a bluesman?

Being able to talk to people, talent, and love of music and people. Always be kind and thoughtful.


How has the music business changed over the years since you first started in music?

Much more diverse and went through alot of modifications.


What's been their experience of gigs in Greece?

People came to my show to enjoy the blues. The people were warm and accepted everything I did for them....to make them happy.


Are there any memories of all these GREAT BLUESMEN which you’d like to share with us?

Pinetop Perkins. We were on a ten week tour which included Xmas and New Years. He kept my spirits up with his clowning.

What advice would you give to aspiring musicians thinking of pursuing a career in the craft?

Be as consistent as possible and practice any chance you get.


If you go back to the past what things you would do better and what things you would a void to do again?

There is always room for improvement. I am very pleased with my life.

From whom have you have learned the most secrets about the blues?

Willie Dixon


Eddy "The Chief" Clearwater's website

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JoeBala

Jared Leto wants to play Jeff Buckley in new biopic

Jared Leto wants to play Jeff Buckley in a new movie, according to Buckley’s former manager Dave Lory.

Lory has just released a new book – Jeff Buckley: From Hallelujah To The Last Goodbye – and was interviewed about the potential to turn the book into a new movie.

“I have been approached, and there are some people reading the book right now. Movies take a long time, I don’t claim to be an expert at it, but the basis is there,” he told 90’s Music podcast Desperate Times.

“The two people who are reading it, I can’t name obviously because they haven’t said yes, but they said, ‘The Jeff Buckley story hasn’t been told, and we’re huge fans.’ So that’s a start, but one of them said, ‘Wow it’s got the love story, you meet your wife on the road with Jeff Buckley. You get married, you have two kids, there’s tragedy, there’s musical genius. It’s got everything you need.’

“I think it’s more of a period piece, because that particular time period, the old show Vinyl didn’t really do justice to the music industry,” he continued. “They didn’t listen to the people that were on their board, or the advisors that were in the music industry. The late 80’s and 90’s was a time when hip hop and punk, and all of these musical genres merged.”

When asked about potential actors for the iconic role, Lory said that Leto had a definite interest.

“Jared Leto wanted to play him,” he said. “I know the estate was trying to do a movie, and they’ve had several false starts. But there’s enough people out there, and some other people who have talked about playing me, so we’ll see.

“I heard Christian Bale, which would be a compliment because I’m not that good looking,” he continued. “The thing is, a lot of these actors want to do credible pieces to keep their credibility after blockbusters, but we’ll see.”

A huge KISS three-year world tour is comingGene Simmons performing with Kiss

Gene Simmons has revealed that KISS are set to announce a huge three-year world tour – kicking off in January 2019.

Speaking to Swedish newspaper Expressen, Simmons described that the glam metal veterans would return in the new year with the “most spectacular tour ever”. He added that it would also take in “all continents”.

As Blabbermouth reports, back in February the band tried to trademark the phrase ‘The End Of The Road’, to be used in connection with “live performances by a musical band”. Many fans have since speculated that this could be a farewell tour from KISS.

However, in an interview with Australia’s News Corp, Simmons downplayed the retirement rumours.

“The god’s honest truth is that I’ve heard this before but I literally had never heard of it until somebody mentioned it and I had nothing to do with it,” he said. “So I might learn something, but I know nothing of it. I wouldn’t pull your leg, by the way.

“Kiss Catalog [the company that filed ‘The End Of The Road’ application] is one of our companies, that’s true — but we trademark all sorts of things. I own [the phrase] ‘Motion Pictures’ — I actually do.There’s always been talk, every tour, that this is the last time.”

He added: “Let me put it bluntly: One day we are going to stop and do the last show. I don’t know when that is… I still look stunning in real life.”

KISS Donald Trump

The band made headlines last year when KISS‘ Paul Stanley hit ...’s death – slamming him as ‘pathetic’ for ‘trying for publicity’ off the passing of a ‘scumbag’.

[It’s] pathetic when somebody [whose] career never really took off is desperate enough to try for publicity by connecting himself to the news of a murdering scumbag’s death,” he wrote.

This forms part of an ongoing feud between Manson and the glam-rock giants, after Manson recently described KISS as “four gay dudes in Halloween costumes.”

Anna Calvi unveils huge, fiery new single, announces new album ‘Hunter’ and UK tour

Anna Calvi has made her long-awaited comeback by unveiling the first new single from her new album ‘Hunter’ along with a lengthy UK tour. Check out ‘Don’t Beat The Girl Out Of My Boy’ along with tour dates below.

After announcing a short string of intimat...pean dates due to kick off this month, the multi Mercury Prize nominee has now announced that her third album ‘Hunter’ will be released via Domino on August 31.

Produced by the legendary Nick Launay (Nick Cave, Grinderman), the album has been launched by the fiery and thunderous battlecry of new single ‘Don’t Beat The Girl Out Of My Boy’, complete with a stunning and dramatic new video directed by Kendrick Lamar collaborator William Kennedy and choreographed by Aaron Sillis, who has worked with the likes of fka Twigs.

“I’ve waited five years for this moment, I’ve waited until I felt this music was right, that I could stand behind it and feel it’s the best and most honest art I could possibly make,” she said, introducing the record. “I gave everything to this record, all my love, all my passion, every inch of me is found in this music. Now I let it go and I hope it finds you. Thank you for being so patient, thank you for being there.

“Primal and beautiful, vulnerable and strong, this is my record, ‘Hunter’.”

Anna Calvi

“‘Hunter’ is the embodiment of the feeling of truly letting go,” reads Calvi’s statement for the album. “For the songwriter and virtuosic guitarist, it was a catharsis, an opportunity to be more truthful than ever.”

It continues: “‘Hunter’ is a visceral album exploring sexuality and breaking the laws of gender conformity. A queer and a feminist record, it is galvanising in its hunt for freedom. It was important to Calvi that it was as vulnerable as it is strong; as beautiful as it is harsh; as much about the hunted as it is about the hunter. But she’s careful not to characterise any of these traits as “masculine” or “feminine” – the whole point is that one person, of any gender, can be both.

“The power is in the contrast itself; in the way she oscillates between extremes, sounding freer than ever before. She wanted to express herself while being “free from the story that either gender is given, free from worrying how people would judge me on what I want to do with my body and myself. For me, that’s quite a utopian vision.”

Anna Calvi’s new album ‘Hunter’

Anna Calvi tour dates and tickets

Calvi’s upcoming UK and Ireland tour dates are below. Tickets to the new shows ...lable here.

Tue June 19 2018 – LONDON Heaven
Thu September 27 2018 – BELFAST Empire
Fri September 28 2018 – DUBLIN Tivoli Theatre
Sun September 30 2018 – GLASGOW St Lukes
Mon October 01 2018 – MANCHESTER O2 Ritz
Wed October 03 2018 – NEWCASTLE UPON TYNE Boiler Shop
Thu October 04 2018 – BIRMINGHAM Town Hall
Fri October 05 2018 – HOVE All Saints Church
Sat October 06 2018 – BRISTOL SWX
Thu February 07 2019 – LONDON Roundhouse

Janelle Monáe announces 2018 UK tour dates

Janelle Monáe has announced details of UK tour dates for September 2018. Full dates and ticket details are below.

In support of her acclaimed new album ‘Dirty Computer‘, Monáe will performing shows in London and Manchester. Full dates are below, with tickets on sale from 9am ...lable here.

Monday September 10 2018 – MANCHESTER Academy
Tuesday September 11 2018 – LONDON Roundhouse

Reviewing ‘Dirty Comput... concluded: “She’s got The Purple One’s punk, mad-scientist approach but creates a world all of her own. Throwing in rap, soul, pop, R&B, space-rock and whatever the hell she wants with her fearless message, Janelle Monáe doesn’t believe in walls or limits: this is a fluid celebration of freedom, raging and raving against the oppressors. In fact, only one label sticks – icon.”

Discussing her collaborat...ith Prince on the record and her previous work, Monae said: “There’s only one Prince and there will never be another. I had the opportunity to be inspired by Prince like the rest of the world growing up. In fact, I used to be terrified of Prince. I could not watch his videos. I had a dream that he chased me in a purple suit.

“It was something about watching this black man, I’d never seen a black man express himself like that, and it scared me. You know I don’t know if it was because maybe I hadn’t been comfortable with tapping into my fearlessness…it’s just like you got the sense that he was a free ass motherf*****, right? And I don’t know if I was ready to tap into my free as motherf***** nature, but I think what I love most is that I got the opportunity to get to know the man who everybody looked at as this mysterious, other-worldly being. You know I did get the opportunity to perform onstage with him”

Dolly Parton receives her own Netflix series based on hit songs

Islands in the Stream.

Dolly Parton has landed her own anthology TV series based on her most popular songs which will be available on Netflix.

The country singer will serve as executive produce and co-star on the show as well as singer and songwriter. The series will be eight-episodes long and will bring her most beloved music “to life”.

In a statement, Parton said of the project: “As a songwriter, I have always enjoyed telling stories through my music. I am thrilled to be bringing some of my favourite songs to life with Netflix. We hope our show will inspire and entertain families and folks of all generations, and I want to thank the good folks at Netflix and Warner Bros. TV for their incredible support.”

According to Variety, Parton signed on for a similar project for NBC in 2015. The singer signed over her songs and aspects of her life which led to two original films ‘Dolly Parton’s Coat Of Many Colours and Christmas of Many Colours: Circle of Love’.

.@DollyParton and her music are headed to Netflix! The living legend will serve as singer/songwriter, co-star, and executive producer on a new anthology series where every episode is based on an iconic Dolly Parton song.

Dolly Parton will be joining Neil Young as the few country stars who have transitioned into Netflix productions. Young wrote the music for...Paradox’, a film described as “far-fetched, whimsical western tale of music and love.”

Meanwhile, Dolly Parton‘s 1980 com...MeToo era.

The original, which also starred Jane Fonda and Lily Tomlin, featured three secretaries getting revenge on their sexist boss (played by Dabney Coleman). 20th Century Fox is reportedly in the early stages of making a modern reboot of the film.

Chuck D on the Early Days of Sampling

Chuck D At Fuse April 2018 (Photo by David S. Rubin) (courtesy of Fuse CLOSE UP)

IN THOSE EARLY, FREE-WHEELING DAYS OF HIP-HOP, THE ARTISTS WERE WAAAAY AHEAD OF THE LAWYERS.

COPYRIGHT CRIMINALS: THE FUNKY DRUMMER EDITION
BENJAMIN FRANZEN

IndiePix Films

29 Mar 2011

AMAZON

Thirty-plus years after the fact, sampling is both a natural element of our cultural ecosystem and a bygone art.

We think nothing, nowadays, of hearing a snippet of sound in a context totally different from its source. That is, after all, a foundational element of hip-hop: the repurposing of drum breaks, instrumental riffs and vocal exclamations as part of the bedrock of a whole new thing. Hip-hop producers weren't the only ones -- maverick sound collagists and even the occasional rock band took to the practice too.

But sampling today isn't what it once was, and hasn't been for quite some time. Where once you could virtual play name-that-tune while listening to a string of hip-hop hits that sampled large chunks of well-known songs, it's now become almost jarring to hear a recognizable sample on a hip-hop track. And when you do, aside from ensembles like the Avalanches, it's not likely to be done with anything close to the compositional detail J Dilla achieved on Donuts.

One reason for that is sampling is no longer as simple a proposition as it used to be. Once older artists, record labels and publishing companies discovered a new generation was making new music from their artistic properties, money became a thing. The phrase "sample clearance" soon entered the industry lexicon, and in time getting the rights to sample older material to goose up a song (let alone sample-heavy opuses like the Beastie Boys' Paul's Boutique) became prohibitively expensive, save for the Kanyes, Beyonces and JAY Zs of the world with massive budgets at their disposals.

Still, sampling transformed how we make and hear music, so it's useful that a comprehensive documentary about the practice's rise and fall is now out in an expanded version. Benjamin Franzen's Copyright Criminals: The Funky Drummer Edition adds a bonus DVD of expanded interviews, WAV files and short featurettes to the original 2009 film. The extra material is nice to have, but the original doc, which aired on PBS' Independent Lens, packs an awful lot of still-relevant information from all perspectives into a tight and lively 53 minutes.

Franzen interviews a ton of people -- rappers, producers, cultural critics, and copyright attorneys -- on all sides of the issue. Among the rappers, Chuck D is prominently featured, and for good reason: Public Enemy's use of sampling, especially on It Takes a Nation of Mill...ld Us Back and Fear of a Black Planet, stand among the high-water marks of sampling as an art form, not just a way to capture an old beat to help make a new hit.

Chuck's experience with sampling mirrors much of the arc Franzen laid out in Copyright Criminals. In a recent phone interview, he explained that the advent of Akai digital samplers and other advanced keyboard technology, brought to market in the mid-'80s, was a game-changer just as Public Enemy was starting out. "We were taking bits and pieces of records and sounds anyway, because we kinda thought that lifting the entire composition, being DJs we had a respect for records recording the composition," he explained. "But we also knew, coming out of remix culture, we could also create from the bits and pieces." He cited Double Dee and Steinski's "Lesson" records ("The Payoff Mix", "The James Brown Mix", and "The History of Hip-Hop Mix") and disco DJs making their own remixes of club hits as early influences in the process.

"We wanted to be diggers," he continued, "we wanted to take the obscure parts that we knew the critical mass either had forgotten or had just overlooked. That's what we had going in our favor, is that we had two rooms of records… we knew that popular culture ran on being fed what was always newnewnewnewnewnew, and we knew that there was a lot of forgetfulness in mass culture."

Sampling older R&B; and soul records, as it happened, allowed Public Enemy to fly under the radar of the companies who held the rights to that music. "They didn't know what they owned, they didn't give a damn about soul or black people or what was a 45 in 1964 on the B-side," he said, "They gave less than a fuck, it was too much bandwidth for them, too much work for them, and we knew that."

In those early, free-wheeling days, the artists were way ahead of the lawyers. "It was like throwing a spitball in 1914," he explained, referring to the baseball pitch that was not outlawed until 1920. "There was no law or no rule, that was what got it over the plate at that particular time, that's what we did," he said.

By the end of the decade, record companies had finally gotten wise to the riches of their back catalogues. Many, such as Blue Note, reissued oft-sampled tracks in new compilations. Others started hiring lawyers and people stepped into remix culture to scour hip-hop records for unauthorized samples. That practice tripped up De La Soul after their groundbreaking Three Feet High and Rising, when their sampling of the Turtles' "You Showed Me" got inadvertently left off the list of samples needing to be cleared, and a lawsuit ensued.

The most notorious sampling lawsuit came in 1991, after Biz Markie lifted Gilbert O'Sullivan's massive hit "Alone Again (Naturally)" for his track "Alone Again". Biz made little effort to hide the original recording in his sample, and O'Sullivan sued to have the record pulled from store shelves. The judge in the case, as reported in Copyright Criminals, pronounced the use of the sample as "Biblically incorrect."

"Now, how country is that, how backwards is that?" posed Chuck in the documentary. "That's somebody who totally is oblivious to the speed of things happening." (When Biz finally dropped the album that was supposed to include "Alone Again", it was called All Samples Cleared.)

But Biz's wholesale use of the O'Sullivan track pointed to a bad habit that would hasten sampling's demise, Chuck says. He alluded to the incident as an example of "when sampling became lazy, when cats would just start taking the whole record, they would take obvious hit records. A lot of the producers and DJs, a lot of them were ten, 12 years younger, they were neophytes, they really kinda couldn't understand that you're taking a record that was such a big pop hit, but you're taking it and trying to get away with it, 'cause you didn't know it, but everybody else did."

By contrast, Chuck and his fellow members of the Bomb Squad production crew (Hank and Keith Shocklee, Eric "Vietnam" Sadler) didn't rely on one familiar sample for their tracks. "We kinda wanted to go for the obscure area," he explained, "and then build upon it with layering and making original sounds versus what we had actually taken, and strung (them) together like calico."

The irony here is that Public Enemy would become a highly sampled hip-hop act -- especially Chuck's booming baritone and Flavor Flav's sneering "yeaaaahhh boyeee!" "It was flattering, I got to hear my voice on somebody else's record," Chuck recalled. But it quickly became a dual-edged sword: "I've written songs, and although I might feel okay as [the sample] being a gratis use, the other songwriters that I shared the composition with, might be, once again, just like the same people who sued us, like 'where's my cut?' I'm like, shake my head, how we came from this environment to how we got the nerve to be mad at somebody sampling us when we sampled as a foundation? But it all becomes a little thing for everybody trying to be themselves and get paid at the end of the day. So I might be benevolent but the next songwriter might not be."

Copyright Criminals goes deep on both sides of the sampling saga -- the art and process of it, and the business end of things. But there's another, less acknowledged side of the story: the musicians whose work is actually being sampled. In the documentary, they're represented by the footage and bonus material featuring Clyde Stubblefield, whose drum break on the 1969 James Brown track "Funky Drummer" became one of the most sampled pieces of music ever. Yet because Stubblefield didn't write the song and isn't credited as the performer, he was never entitled to any royalties for the use of his break. At least sampling -- and the worldwide deep funk-sampling community -- established Stubblefield, who passed away in 2017, as an artist in his own light. (Much the same can be said for his fellow JB drummer John "Jabo" Starks, who passed away in April 2018.)

To hear Chuck tell it (and others in Copyright Criminals allude likewise), it wasn't just the act of sampling for them, it was the material they were sampling. Public Enemy's two rooms of records contained a treasure trove of soul, funk and R&B;, all played by some of the greatest musicians of the era. Just as they didn't rhyme for the sake of riddling, they didn't sample just for the thrill of doing it. They were specific and most intentional in what they sampled, why they sampled it, and how they used it. They both valued and craved the messages, grooves and textures of all that back-in-the-day black music, and their tapping into that vast canon gave their end results a sonic and cultural richness beyond merely looping a familiar hook or instrumental riff.

It's the essential quality of that back-in-the-day musicianship, the engineers who worked the boards on recording sessions, and the makeshift closets or state-of-the-art studios where they happened, that Chuck sees as the biggest difference between hip-hop then and now. Or, to be specific, it's the loss of those essential qualities, with sampling restrictions (and newer recording technologies and tools) leading producers and musicians to rely more on wholly-original beats. "The musicians that made hip-hop, I think, in the last 20 years were far more inferior in skill and talent [to] the musicians from the records that we sampled, and that's a fact," he said. "These musicians today can't touch the musicians and the recording engineers and techniques of the '60s and '70s, I don't care what kind of new shit they come up with.

"That's why sampling was so popular, because it was able to take a magic and a dynamic that probably couldn't be repeated easily, if ever again. Many of those musicians and engineers have come and gone, they've passed away. But that magic is there, documented and recorded. A sample is going to take a magic snatch, and it can't be duplicated with a bunch of lesser musicians in the studio working by themselves. They ain't got the chops to do it, they just ain't got it."

Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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Reply #57 posted 06/06/18 7:51am

JoeBala

'Black Cowboys' and 'The Best Country Blues You've Never Heard' Chart New Trails through Old-Time Music

BLACK MUSIC'S PAST IS A RABBIT HOLE MORE THAN BIG ENOUGH FOR THESE TWO VASTLY DIFFERENT EXCURSIONS INTO ITS SECRET RICHES.

DOM FLEMONS PRESENTS BLACK COWBOYS
DOM FLEMONS

Smithsonian Folkways

March 2018

OTHER
THE ROUGH GUIDE TO THE BEST COUNTRY BLUES YOU'VE NEVER HEARD
VARIOUS ARTISTS

World Music Network

March 2018

I spent a goodly portion of 2008 writing my way out of a rabbit hole.

We all know the feeling: a random Google search or YouTube video turns into a never-ending chase down some particularly arcane path, resulting in some momentary expertise about whatever was down that path, possible membership in an equally arcane Facebook community, and lost sleep.

My excursion was a bit more pronounced, having played itself out on these pages over the course of a year. It began as something of a trend piece on current black bands investigating long-past strains of black music. But the digging that piece prompted, and the releases of new scholarship seemingly timed to keep me ensconced in my excavations, took me back nearly a century before I could find a resting point. It wasn't really a resting point as much as it was a surrender; if I'd really wanted to I could have kept drilling and weaving my way down any number of forgotten tributaries some more (and in some respects, I've done exactly that).

The key takeaway from my trip was that the long history of black pop music -- the music itself, the entrepreneurship and industry it spawned, and the broader cultural questions raised with every discovery and backwards glance -- is a grade-A Rabbit Hole, replete with trails and offshoots that touch upon mass media, the Great Migration and faith, to name just three of them. There is more to the story than appears on the surface, especially generations after the fact, and nothing to suggest you will ever exhaust the offerings.

This is especially true for the acoustic blues music black people recorded during the '20s and '30s. There was -- and there is no other way to say this -- a holy fricking ton of it, by artists who would be enshrined in the heavens and by artists who were forgotten shortly after leaving the studio. Much of this music was recorded before the Great Depression, and even more of it during those years, and little of it sold a quarter as much as the mainstream pop of the day. Not surprisingly, given the still-nascent state of the record industry back then (and the not-so-nascent state of racial attitudes), most of it was considered disposable and more or less treated as such. Without grabbing and preserving whatever physical slices of all this magic and invention still survived, who in the future would know what it sounded like?

The only people who seemed to value this incredible range of music -- rough, profane, desperate, whimsical, schmaltzy, and everything else on the spectrum of human life -- were the fanboys (mostly white, and mostly indeed male) sniffing around in the '40s and '50s, who couldn't get their first whiff of it out of their systems. Hopelessly bitten by the bug, they scoured attics and thrift shops gobbling up these old blues records, which were already fragile to begin with because of the shellac they were pressed on. They started cataloging them, traded information with each other, and chased down their own rabbit holes in search of whatever missing link was blinking like neon from their collections.

Eventually, licensing and financial attribution be damned, they started creating compilations of the best of their finds, to share their genuine love of this music with the world without endangering the precious raw materials (Samuel Charters' 1959 book and compilation album The Country Blues, released by Folkway Records, popularized the catch-all name for the whole category; future archivists would draw clearer distinctions between styles, eras and regions but the idea of all of it being "country blues" still stuck). Those initial collections spawned additional collections, and then pilgrimages down South to find whoever of those artists was still alive, sit at the fount of their wisdom, and book them on revival tours.

From there, the music found a new audience, and several times at that. The '60s folk movement drew strength from it. Bob Dylan tapped into the canon on his own and with the Band, as did the Grateful Dead and other rockers. Latter-day revivalists learned from it to refashion blues music in a new age. Robert Johnson, a largely forgotten figure, was proclaimed King of the Delta Blues Singers by his former record label, and covered by Cream and the Rolling Stones.

Over time, the music, or at least damned near all of it still extant, was made available again. The maddening range of it -- the eastern songsters, the Delta guitarists, the jug bands, the holy rollers, the traveling preachers, the bawdy raunch peddlers, the raconteurs and jokesters, the vaudeville divas, and everyone else -- was back in circulation, and more broadly than ever before. New generations of collectors and scholars made greater care to delineate the differences between the styles, and built upon the previous research to flesh out a truer, more complete story of this music, which by then had become a large piece of the bedrock of America's musical culture. When the music came to digital life on any number of CD compilations, one could explore the entire holy fricking ton of it without having to risk breaking a brittle artifact, and could read a few words about the artists to boot. Thanks to both the internet and those legendary obsessives, chasing and detailing black music's past is a lot easier now.

World Music Network is among the most diligent chronicles and surveyors of this old, weird rabbit hole. Over the years, WMN has released a fair number of compilations from this massive canon as part of its Rough Guide series of collections from major artists (including Youssou N'Dour, Johnny Cash, and Edith Piaf) global regions (Scandinavia, China, and Brazil to name just three), and specific sub-cultures and moments in cultural time (e.g., Boogaloo, African Rare Groove, Arabic Revolution).

The target audience isn't that devoted, specialized fanatic who wants, no, needs to know everything surrounding the difference between that July 1934 recording of a song by Little Luther X and the April 1935 version by Big Mary Y. The Rough Guide series trades comprehensiveness for accessibility, giving you enough to have a measure of cultural literacy without the bother of that whole rabbit hole thing. They're billed as guides, after all, not encyclopedias (in this case, the true believers know where the real road map is: UK-based Document Records, which has taken its name to literal extremes).

Thus, after having issued collections of jug band blues, Piedmont/East Coast blues, ragtime blues, hillbilly (read: white people) blues, gospel blues, holy blues, songsters and two volumes of Unsung Heroes of Country Blues, plus anthologies of Blind Blake, Blind Lemon Jefferson, Blind Boy Fuller, Blind Willie Johnson, Charley Patton and Barbecue Bob, WMN went on another excavation trip back into the hole for The Rough Guide to the Best Country Blues You've Never Heard. Perhaps though, given their extensive catalogue, a better title would be The Best Country Blues We Hadn't Yet Re-Packaged.

In any event, it's hard to argue with the title: non-frequenters of this particular rabbit hole (certainly those unfamiliar with Document's massive archive) probably have never heard these songs. And it's not just that these artists aren't as famous as Johnson or Memphis Minnie (they aren't), or that they haven't been included on someone else's anthology at some point (many of them have). Rough Guides exist to save people with both broad musical curiosity and a life from tumbling down arcane rabbit holes. Those folks haven't thought to go wandering off in search of 90-year-old acoustic blues music by third- or fourth-tier artists with small discographies but might like the results, so this collection is a super time-saver for them.

Indeed, these 25 tracks, recorded for various labels between 1927 and 1936, really are obscure. Charlie McCoy and Lottie Kimbrough are probably the most recognizable names to casual travelers down the hole, but some of the other names are, well, pretty classic: Jack O'Diamonds, "Funny Papa" Smith (although some listings have him as "Funny Paper"), Mississippi Matilda, the Two Poor Boys, Papa Egg Shell. Musically, this even-keeled set leans towards 12-bar Delta blues, with a few songsters and Texas blues players thrown in for variety's sake. We get not one but two tributes to Jefferson, whose sudden passing in 1927 shocked the blues world. Winston Holmes adds some bird calls to his "Lost Lover Blues" duet with Kimbrough, while Ollis Martin warns about law enforcement behavior generations before N.W.A. ("Police and High Sheriff Come Ridin' Down"). For those seeking to get their Saturday night on, there's Walter Coleman's "Mama Let Me Lay It on You" ("and if your bed break down/ see me pilin' on the floor"), followed promptly by Pearl Dickson's "Twelve Pound Daddy"("and if my twelve pound daddy won't come/ my eight pound daddy will do").

It's a pleasant collection, but these tunes aren't linked by anything but their obscurity. If this is your first exposure to the rabbit hole, this will likely whet your appetite for the classic stuff, all of which is far less obscure (and you'll want to keep a browser tab open, as there's little background provided on any of these artists). If you're familiar with the field, you've just added a few tunes to your collection, depending on which anthologies you may or may not already have, but you haven't learned anything substantially new or life-changing.

It's all cool music, but what's the point here? If it's to make an authoritative statement about the best music the Rough Guide team hasn't already anthologized, I'll defer to those who've spent way more time down the hole than I have. If it's to celebrate this art and these artists, some more substantial liner notes would have been nice. If it's to offer a slice of completist coolness to folks who aren't really trying to be completists, mission accomplished. And if it's to get others curious about going down this particular hole, that might happen too.

Whatever the motivation, a title like …The Best Country Blues You've Never Heard implies an end of sorts, as if to say the rest of whatever else is down that hole isn't worth your time. (Although there's nothing to suggest that someday there couldn't be a Volume 2 - it seems there's always forgotten music to stumble upon in amazement.) But rabbit holes aren't that straightforward, as we all know. Keep digging around and you could end up in a truly magical place, one you've never heard for real, that opens up not onto a category, but a way of life. Exhibit A: the black American West.

* * *

You'd never know it from watching a John Ford western or any other Hollywood depiction, but black people were an integral part of how the West was won. In the years after the Civil War, blacks found freedom out west in numerous occupations, including as cowboys. They worked on ranches and cattle drives, relying on their fellow cowboys (white, Mexican and Native American alike) to get the perilous job done. The work subsided with the advent of the Transcontinental Railroad, but cowboy culture trickled down through the years. Their music and storytelling became a piece of American folklore, kept alive in recent years by institutions like the National Cowboy Poetry Gathering.

Dom Flemons fell into that particular rabbit hole from a couple of different tracks. He was already clued in to the deep well of acoustic black roots music as a co-founder of the Carolina Chocolate Drops, the acclaimed ensemble dedicated to reclaiming early blues and black folk music as a still-vital and engaging piece of American culture. He also has a personal connection: he grew up in the same Arizona town where legendary black cowboy Nat Love once lived. When he came upon Phillip Dunham and Everette L. Jones' 1965 study The Negro Cowboys, Flemons was intrigued enough to start an extensive research project about black cowboy music and the culture surrounding it, criss-crossing the country in search of its lingering traces. He emerged from that rabbit hole with Black Cowboys (2018), a remarkably enlightening presentation of a slice of culture all but whitewashed from our common knowledge. As opposed to the Rough Guide collection, most of this really is stuff you've never hear, or even thought to seek.

The first thing to understand is this isn't what we'd call country music, or anything we've come to associate with the music of the West (although there's a good reason why they used to call the genre "country and western"). It begins with his plaintive "Black Woman", ana cappella lament that's actually a field holler collected by John Lomax in the '30s. But it isn't all that far a stretch to imagine a lonesome cowboy singing this out on the trail, far from family and loved ones.

Other selections highlight Flemons' graceful touch on guitar, banjo and even rhythm bones ("John Henry y los vasqueros", a nod to the Mexicans whose innovations were central to cowboy life and work) and fife and drum (his version of "Red River Valley", with a nod to the Buffalo Soldiers of the mid-1800s). He taps into cowboy poetry, a folk art passed down mostly through oral culture across generations. The poem "Ol' Proc" attests to the color-blind creed of the cowboy life, valuing skill over ethnicity when it came to herding cattle.

Another example of cowboy meritocracy happens on "Goodbye Old Paint", a tribute to a horse recorded by a white singer in 1947 whose dad worked with black cowboys. That singer, Jess Morris, learned the song from a black cowboy, and later learned the fiddle from another one. Not to get all meta about it, but think of the multiple ironies here: a white guy learns a song from a black singer, learns about music from another one, then 70 years later, a black performer retrieves the entire chain from history's dusty trail. Given America's tangled racial history, and our near-total lack of understanding about it, the discovery of this kind of cross-cultural exchange might seem pretty mind-blowing. Except it isn't really cross-cultural: it's all part of one tradition that just so happens to be populated by people of various skin tones.

Flemons also retrieves music from better known performers: a couple of tunes each from Texas songster Henry Thomas and Leadbelly. In addition to selections from the cowboy canon, he features his own tributes to the best known black cowboys, Love ("Steel Pony Blues"), Bass Reeves ("He's a Lone Ranger" -- Reeves was said to have inspired the fictional Lone Ranger character) and Bill Pickett ("One Dollar Bill"), who starred in Richard E. Norman's 1923 film, The Bull-Dogger, the earliest depiction of black cowboys in film. That these songs sound more contemporary than the others serves as a helpful point of familiarity for unwary listeners not used to old-time styles (in case any of them somehow happen upon it, as specialized and blissfully disconnected from current music as it is).

The connections to American musical and folk culture abound throughout Black Cowboys, but never more so than on Flemons' rendition of "Home on the Range". The story goes that John Lomax recorded the standard version of the song, the one we've known since forever, in 1908, as sung by a black bartender in San Antonio. I can virtually guarantee you that until now, no one outside the cowboy culture community had any inkling this most identifiably Western song -- an anthem of traditional America you've probably never heard a person of color sing in earnest, and you've heard the song a million times -- had a black lineage. When people say black history is really American history, this is the kind of stuff they're talking about.

Flemons and his crackerjack bandmates (including Alvin Youngblood Hart, Dante Pope and Brian Farrow) immerse themselves in the music, even donning Western garb for the liner note booklet. But this is no dress-up party. They bring a sense of reverence to the material, and they render it with a sense of joy, making Black Cowboys a wondrous listening experience. Come for the history lesson, stay for Flemons' deeply felt gratitude for the adventures of black cowboys, and the music they left us. File it right next to the 2013 book Hidden in the Mix: The African American Presence in Country Music (Duke University Press, 2013) and the 1998 CD boxed set From Where I Stand: The Black Experience in Country Music (Warner Bros., 1988) as proof positive of how much black music runs like a river all through American culture beyond merely blues, gospel, jazz and pop.

Black Cowboys is a thematic album, as opposed to the Rough Guide semi-random compilation. Those, of course, are two entirely different beasts, and semi-random compilations certainly have their place in the world. But …The Best Country Blues You've Never Heard, while it's entertaining enough for the field, doesn't pack anywhere near the feeling of revelation and enchantment Flemons invests into Black Cowboys. Much of the Rough Guide collection can be found elsewhere, if only by accident on a journey through black pop's forgotten trails. But Flemons, in presenting an under-heralded tradition freshly for today's audiences (and tomorrow's as well -- Smithsonian Folkways does a much more thorough job of repackaging and re-contextualizing American music's past than does World Music Network), did something a lot more profound on his impressively deep dive. He came back up with something we might not have found in a million dives, crystallizing his discoveries into a singular, unified package we all can both learn from and enjoy. It's the kind of work that, more likely than not, will send someone somewhere down a rabbit hole that just opened up.

Shakira Kicks Off The ‘El Dorado Tour’ In Hamburg, Germany: 7 Pics

Mike Wass | June 4, 2018 12:04 pm

Shakira’s El Dorado Tour was supposed to kick off last year, but she had to postpone for close to seven months after suffering a hemorrhage on her right vocal chord. The show finally got underway at the Barclaycard Arena in Hamburg, Germany last night (June 3) and it looks like it was well and truly worth the wait. The Colombian superstar delivered a quirky set that mixed hits from three decades (her ’90s albums are surprisingly well represented) as well as some deep cuts and classic collaborations.

The concert kicked off with a medley of “Estoy aquí” and “¿Dónde estás corazón?” from 1995’s Pies Descalzos, before transition into something a little more current with “She Wolf.” It was then back to the ’90s with Dónde Están los Ladrones? gem “Si Te Vas.” Next up was a couple of tracks from El Dorado followed by Laundry Service ballad “Underneath Your Clothes.” Other mega-hits on the setlist include “Chantaje,”“Whenever, Wherever,” “La Tortura,” “Can’t Remember To Forget You,” “Waka Waka” and “Hips Don’t Lie.”

After wrapping up the European leg, Shakira will bring the El Dorado Tour to North America on August 3. Get acquainted with the setlist below and check out pics from opening night up top.

Shakira’s El Dorado Tour setlist:

1. Estoy Aquí / ¿Dónde Estás Corazón?

2. She Wolf

3. Si Te Vas

4. Nada

5. Perro Fiel

6. Underneath Your Clothes

7. Me Enamoré

8. Inevitable

9. Chantaje

10. Whenever, Wherever

11. Tú

12. Amarillo

13. La Tortura

14. Antología

15. Can’t Remember To Forget You

16. Loca / Rabiosa

17. La La La (Brazil 2014)

18. Waka Waka (This Time for Africa)

19. Toneladas

20. Hips Don’t Lie

21. La Bicicleta

Anna Clendening On How Justin Bieber Inspired Her New Track "Boys Like You"

PHOTO: CHRIS CHARLES
Welcome to The Drop, Refinery29's new home for exclusive music video premieres. We want to shine the spotlight on women artists whose music inspires, excites, and (literally) moves us. This is where we'll champion their voices.
In 2014, Anna Clendening took the America's Got Talent stage with a haunting version of "Hallelujah." She shared more than just her voice with the judges: she also discussed her battle with anxiety and depression, which kept her bedridden for months prior to her audition. Clendening is comfortable getting candid with her fans (she has amassed over 535,000 followers on Instagram) and, these days, shares both her thoughts and her music online.
Her latest music video, which was shot in her home state of North Carolina, is "Boys Like You." The song is an ode to the boys that moms everywhere warned their daughters not to date...but dated anyway. In our conversation, Clendening talks how Justin Bieber inspired the song, the pros and cons of connecting with fans online, and what went into crafting such a lush, gorgeous music video.
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What is your songwriting process like?
"I usually write these hooks for Instagram. Kind of like field testing ideas and such with my followers and seeing what they respond to. It’s easy when I have the piano with me. I was thinking about Justin Bieber’s 'Love Yourself' and that line, 'My momma don’t like you and she likes everyone.' It kind of just stuck out. I remember growing up and you know, your parents telling you like, 'Watch out for these boys! Boys are trouble!' And this phrase stuck in my mind, 'Momma said there’d be boys like you.' I wrote out the hook and posted it online and a lot of people really liked it... [To me, the song says] 'You know, I’m interested in this guy but I’m nervous because my mom warned me about guys like you, but I think I’ll take that risk.'"
How did you come up with the theme for the video?
"I started with the idea that I wanted to have hands in the [album artwork.] You could read into [the image] however you wanted. Like two people coming together or one person possibly pulling away. And I kind of wanted to keep the theme around that. Then Daniel [the director] came up with the idea of playing with that in the video. So in the video you’ll never see a guy’s face but you’ll see his hands.
"The video, I won’t say vague, but it gives the listener expression and freedom to interpret it however they want...In the beginning, I’m walking into this house. You see plastic over everything and I look at that as kind of like past relationships and [being] stuck in a cycle. And then I go throughout the video, and [at the end] I walk out of this house having broken all these bad cycles. I grab his hand and I go for it. I think that goes perfectly with the song. At the very end of the song it says, 'For you, I’ll take that risk.'"
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How did you choose where to set the video?
"I actually suffer from very severe anxiety and depression. I live in Los Angeles, but I had to go home at the end of January becuase I had this huge panic attack. I had to get my anxiety under control, and I had to go back to North Carolina. I couldn’t get on a plane...I’ve got to be close to the house. And the director Daniel just found a really great waterfront on a lake near my house. We actually filmed at an Airbnb and put plastic over everything. It looked like a scene from Dexter! It actually turned out incredibly awesome. It gave this really great atmosphere with the smoke and the plastic.
"I was skeptical shooting the video in North Carolina. I was like, 'Oh you know, I grew up there. What is there to shoot?' And Daniel took this simple lake and this house with furniture covered in plastic and then this neighborhood and turned it into something incredible. I didn't want to put any expectations on it and kind of let Daniel do his thing. I trusted him and I really think that is when artists flourish."
What is it like connecting and sharing with people on Instagram at this point in your career?
"It’s absolutely wonderful because the people that reach out to you and the people that you connect with…it is a feeling I can't describe. Like the first time someone reached out to me with like, 'I have anxiety and I have emetophobia too, I thought I was the only one!' That is such a great feeling to be able to connect with someone. And not only make yourself feel not alone but for that other person to not feel alone as well. This is an opportunity that I wouldn’t have had if it weren’t for the internet. Like someone in India could message me and be like, 'I saw your video and I think it’s amazing. It made me feel this way and I’m so glad I’m not alone.' And that’s the great part about it.
"I try to read my messages as much as possible. I went through a break up last year and was able to be really really raw with people and say, 'You know, I’m not a professional public speaker. I’m just kind of giving my advice as a real person. This is what I’m going through. This is what I’m doing.' And it really connected with a lot of people.
"The downside is anybody can say whatever they want on the internet and a lot of people have a lot of opinions. I still think that is a wonderful thing, that no matter who you are, you can express your opinion but sometimes people’s opinions do hurt. And I’ve gathered some very thick skin over the years. Sometimes I’ll come across a comment and it will get to me but you have to realize that these people that are just passing by, that don’t even know who you are, they don’t see you as a person."
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What advice would you give to young women trying to break into the music industry right now?
"I would say be genuine. People can tell when you’re not. And if you’re not genuine, you will never be happy doing music. Music first and foremost needs to be something that you love to do. If you’re doing it to become famous you are not going to like it and I found that out the hard way. Trying to find my style over four or five years and trying to make people happy and write in a certain way. But one day I was like, 'You know what? I’m just going to write what makes me happy.' Then it lead me here. And practice. That’s obviously a big thing. I write every day. And I sing every day because I love it."
Check out the video for "Boys Like You" below:

https://www.youtube.com/w...wBeHrCCJ6M

*

https://www.youtube.com/w...335hP2iim0

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Just Music-No Categories-Enjoy It!
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JoeBala

Your First Look At MAC's Highly Anticipated Aaliyah Collection

PHOTO: DAVE ALLOCCA/DMI/THE LIFE PICTURE COLLECTION/GETTY IMAGES.
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Update: At long last, we finally know what MAC Aaliyah looks like. As expected, every single eye shadow, lipstick, pencil, and bronzer is special — thanks to Aaliyah's brother, Rashad Haughton, who helped curate the collection. Check them out ahead, then mark your calendars: The collection is available on maccosmetics.com on June 20, and select stores June 21.
This post was originally published on August 24, 2017.


For the past few years, Aaliyah fans have been actively petitioning MAC to launch a collection in honor of the late R&B icon. The star, whose life was cut far too short when she died tragically in a plane crash at the age of 22, was reportedly a huge fan of the brand’s makeup, and her supporters even created a Change.org campaign — officially endorsed by Aaliyah’s brother Rashad Haughton, glam squad, and dear friend Missy Elliott — that has racked up over 26,000 signatures to date.
After months of rumors circulating that the highly anticipated collaboration was indeed in the works, MAC has finally confirmed that the Aaliyah for MAC collection is on, and slated to launch in 2018.
On the eve of the 16th anniversary of the star’s death on August 25, 2001, the brand took to Instagram to announce the news, saying, “Aaliyah is truly one in a million — an unstoppable icon whose groundbreaking work in R&B music and film inspires us all. Today we join her countless fans in celebrating her with the announcement of the M·A·C Aaliyah collection. You made it happen! Stay tuned in 2018.”
There’s no word yet on which products will be included in the lineup, but considering the singer’s instantly recognizable signature look of perfectly arched brows, major lashes, and glossy, well-lined nude lips, it’s not a complete mystery. Aaliyah left a major impact on the world in her short time here, and this is just one more way her legacy — and her iconic style — can endure.
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What won't endure, however, is the limited-edition collection once it hits shelves. MAC's wildly popular posthumous tribute to another beloved singer, Selena, sold out in a matter of days, so if you've got your heart set on snagging a piece of this one, you'll definitely want to keep up with the brand's social media in the upcoming months.

Jess Glynne on Ditching the Studio to Write Her New Album in the Countryside: 'I Felt a Little Lost'

Nadine Ijewere
Jess Glynne

Your ears are not deceiving you: Yes, that is a bit of a country flair you're hearing on Jess Glynne's new single, "I'll Be There," and no, she hasn't been hanging out with her new labelmate Yodeling Boy.

The "Rather Be" singer isn't exactly sure where it came from -- maybe it's a remnant of her teenage Keith Urban phase that jumped out, or maybe there was just something in the air when Glynne and a small team of her closest collaborators decamped to the English countryside to write songs for her upcoming second studio album. Either way, it marks a welcome return for the 28-year-old Brit, who tells Billboard that she initially struggled to find a direction for the follow-up to 2015's I Cry When I Laugh until she broke out of the studio environment.

"It’s been such a different experience making this album and putting it together," she says. "You’re always compared to what you did the last time, but nothing’s ever going to be the same, so you just gotta go with it."

Below, Glynne tells Billboard about returning to normal life after touring, the stress of writing songs in Los Angeles, and what to expect from her new LP.

It’s been a minute since we heard new music from you. Were you nervous about putting out songs again?

It was quite nerve-wracking ,coming back after having been away for awhile -- and releasing music that sounds different. It’s obviously not part of the same chapter that was so successful. But I feel really good about this song. I love the way it came together so much. You don’t realize how much work goes into one song, so it’s a really great feeling to see that people are enjoying it.

How much time off did you need to tafter touring before you felt ready to write again?

I was touring all the way up to the end of 2016, but I started writing again in April of that year. I hadn’t written for a while -- the first album was done eight months before it was released. I just felt really inspired and had a lot to say. I think it was just a bit of a confusing time for me. I was on the road so much, and it didn’t feel as good as I wanted it to. So I waited until I finished my on-the-road madness, and then I got back into the studio at the beginning of 2017 for six or seven weeks in Los Angeles. It was really intense, actually, and that’s when I got really into the next project.

What had you so inspired?

I had been through a lot emotionally, having stepped out of the first campaign and getting back to normal -- seeing friends and family, [dealing with] relationships. I’ve been through some great times, but I’ve had some hard times too. I got to a place where I wanted to write and let it all out. We all let things out differently. Not everybody is a singer or a writer. But my way of letting things out is making music, and at that point I was just ready to get it all down.

You also worked out of a house in the English countryside for this album. How fruitful was that compared to the Los Angeles studio sessions?

LA was such an amazing time -- I wrote so many great songs. I was so inspired, but it was also quite tiring and quite draining as well. It wasn't my best. I loved so much of what I did, but I also felt a little lost. So I took a step back because I didn’t know where I was headed with the music, and I think the label felt that as well. They were encouraging, but they were unsure of where it was all headed. So I took a bit of time away and lived my life and did my thing.

In August I was ready to get back in, but I wanted to do it my way. I called up my A&R and said, “Look, can I please just go away in the middle of nowhere, with no pressure, no studio -- somewhere that’s not meant for music but has a feeling of being free. I’ll take people I love working with, and I’ll take a few other people if you have anyone you want to suggest. We’ll spend a week there and be creative in the most organic space possible.”

They were so on board with it and so excited that I wanted to get back into the studio. I’m so grateful -- they put it together for me and did it exactly how I wished. It was the most productive week I could have had, and it was probably one of the most amazing times in my life, if I’m honest. I felt like the majority of the album got created in that week. “I’ll Be There” was written on the last day. It was the last one I wrote.

Even though the production is very pop, there’s something about the melodies that evokes country music. Where does that come from?

It is very country! I’ve always loved country music, and I feel like a lot of my songs have that element to them. “Hold My Hand” has a weird little country melody to it. I don’t necessarily listen to a lot of it, but growing up I was obsessed at one point with Keith Urban and Gavin DeGraw, and I think that comes out sometimes without me knowing.

It still feels like you could perform the song campfire-style with just an acoustic guitar.

Yeah, that song was basically written on guitar. I always want my songs to be able to be performed in any way. As long as a song has an amazing structure that feels like you’ve got a journey, then it’s going to work in any form. I’m glad that it comes across.

Does touring the first record and playing those songs night after night change or teach you anything about what you look for in a song?

I think it did. When you’re standing on stage and hear the songs that people love and sing back to you, you hear what works and what doesn’t work. I think it’s really important. Now when you write a lot of songs and go back and listen to them, you hear what will work on stage, you hear what people might connect with.

But at the same time, it’s a personal thing, and I don’t know if that’s definite. I never go into the studio with anything other than my creativity. If I have to put pressure [on finding] what works, I’m never going to get anywhere. You can never predict what people are going to like or how they are going to react. You just have to believe in yourself and hope for the best.

Spandau Ballet Debuts New Singer In London: 'This Is a Rebirth of the Band'

Denis O&#39;Regan
Spandau Ballet

British pop group Spandau Ballet introduced new singer Ross William Wild in a small club show at London's Subterania on Wednesday (June 6) night. Wild was selected as a replacement for Tony Hadley after the longtime frontman departed the band last year, and is helping to usher the famed '80s musicians into a new era.

"This is a rebirth of the band," guitarist Gary Kemp told Billboard ahead of Spandau Ballet's performance. "But it still feels like the band. It still sounds like the band. The energy is the same. We've still got the main songwriter. We've still got all the same musical protagonists. And now we've got this new guy who is filling us with new vitality. He's really stepped up to the plate with a lot of talent and passion and knowledge."

The British group, which formed in London in 1979, released six albums during their heyday in the '80s before splitting up in 1990 due to disagreements over royalties. They reunited in 2009 with a new album and two global tours, and have continued to perform and write music since. When Hadley announced via Twitter last July that he was leaving the group there wasn't any doubt as to whether Spandau Ballet would carry on, largely because the musicians didn't feel finished.

"We felt that only one fifth of the group left," Kemp said. "We wanted to make it work. We really felt we couldn't let this one go. It hadn't run its course and there are still people out there who want to hear the songs played by the original guys. We just had to find a guy who would sing it."

Following Hadley's exit, the remaining four musicians hired a casting director and auditioned over a dozen singers. Wild was one of the first, having met bassist Martin Kemp in The Million Dollar Quartet tour in 2016, and Spandau Ballet was immediately impressed by his voice and presence. "We weren't looking for someone who sounded like Tony," Kemp noted. "But they needed the range and the gravitas and the power."

Their London show opened with "Through The Barricades," a fitting introduction to Wild as it was the song he performed in his audition. The track, from the band's 1986 album of the same name, was a top 10 single in the U.K., peaking at No. 6. The band focused primarily on the hits with a 12-song setlist that also included "I'll Fly For You," "Communication" and "True," the group's 1983 single that peaked at No. 4 on the Billboard Hot 100. They capped the night off with a short encore of "To Cut A Long Story Short" and "Gold."

Subterania, a 600-capacity venue, was previously known as Acklam Hall, playing host to The Clash and Joy Division in the '70s and '80s. Spandau Ballet formerly performed in the club as The Gentry, a prior incarnation of the group that featured the Kemp brothers. "About 40 years ago there was a bunch of young kids who played on this stage called The Gentry," Martin told the cheering audience. "This time it feels like it's come full circle and we're starting out again – except this time it feels more exciting."

Presently Spandau Ballet doesn't have any plans to release new music as a follow-up to Once More, released in 2009 via Mercury, although Kemp is currently writing songs. "Once people get to know his voice then it's going to be an easier thing to do," the musician said. "One thing at a time. Maybe we'll introduce some new stuff into the live show, who knows? I don't think you can make a plan until you know the reaction from the fans." The band has announced a one-off show at London's Eventim Apollo Hammersmith on Oct. 29, and hopes to continue playing live, particularly since the musicians feel re-enlivened by Wild's presence.

"This feels a lot better," Kemp said. "The energy in the room feels much better. Everyone wants to do this. Everyone's happy. I think Tony found some of it difficult and I think we're really excited about it."

Hadley, who has his own solo album Talking To the Moon out this week, continues to perform Spandau Ballet songs separately from the band. Although Kemp says the musicians were disappointed when he left, they understood. "We're all guys in our fifties," he said. "We have the right to leave a band. And that's absolutely fine." As for whether they remain on good terms? "I wouldn't say that," Kemp said. "I think we wish him well. We wish him well, but it's probably best if we steer clear of each other for a few months until the dust has settled."

The crowd of fans in Subterania last night didn't seem to miss Hadley too much, quickly embracing Wild into the fold. The singer's nerves visibly dissipated after the opening number. "It's an honor to be here before you guys," Wild told the audience. "And with these guys." By the end of the hour-long set, Spandau Ballet were relieved of any lingering nerves. "This has been fun," Kemp said, grinning at the fans. "Thank you for your acceptance."

By Music News Group

courtesy of the artist Maxwell posted a mysterious tease today hinting he’s about to drop his first new music in two years.

The three-time Grammy award winner tweeted a snippet of music with the comment, “The Glass House 6/12/18,” suggesting the music will drop Tuesday, June 12.

In the 15-second clip, we hear an emergency alarm. According to a press release, Maxwell’s “ominous video snippet” is hinting at “what’s coming next week, in his first new music since 2016.”

The 45-year old singer has posted a series of tweets recently mentioning “The Glass House.” Last month, he posted what appears to be a movie poster with an image of a hand-drawn house. It reads “The Glass House… We Never Saw It Coming, starring Maxwell introducing Yomi Abiola.” She is a model and journalist.

Gerard Bush and Christopher Renz, who shot the short film Kill Jay-Z for JAY-Z‘s 2017 album 4:44,are listed as the directors, suggesting they have also created a short film for Maxwell.

Maxwell’s most recent album, blackSummer’snight, was released July 1, 2016.

Sara Bareilles on Her Songwriting Process & Upcoming Projects

Evans Vestal Ward/NBC/NBCU Photo Bank via Getty Images
Sara Bareilles at the Egyptian Theatre on May 21, 2018 in Hollywood, Calif.

Sara Bareilles is having a banner year, and we’re barely six months in. Aside from her enduring powerhouse vocals, she recently mastered the role of Mary Magdalene in NBC’s live production of Jesus Christ Superstar and this Sunday night she’ll co-host the Tony Awards, two years after she herself was nominated for Best Original Score for Waitress.

Her artistic sphere may be broadening, but a common thread of self-awareness, compassion and shared human experience run deep through all of Bareilles’ artistic expressions -- just a few of the reasons why the Songwriters Hall of Fame will honor her with its Hal David Starlight Award on June 14, a recognition specifically granted to gifted young songwriters.

Let’s start with your songwriting process. What’s that like?
Traditionally for me it has always been a very organic process, sometimes something as simple as sitting down at the piano and placing my hands at random and finding the seed of an idea. And if a song would take too long or take too much reworking, I would lose the thread of where it was headed and would tend to abandon those ideas. And that’s something I have gotten a great education about through working on Waitress, and working on a musical theater project, and that is staying with an idea and being willing to work and rework. That’s been the biggest shift in the last five years. My process has been more assignment-based, which I used to feel was a bit of a contamination of the purity and expression for the sake of expression, but I’ve actually found writing for an assignment has unlocked some interesting stuff for me personally to explore ideas and stay with them.

Sara Bareilles in New York City on Feb. 27, 2018.

Yes, you definitely have been adding new roles to your repertoire lately.
It’s an outside-in process, to have the idea first and then you have to get there. There was Waitress, and I’m working on a TV project right now and developing ideas for that. And I did a song for This American Life about President Obama, and that was a really daunting experience but also assignment-based, and it actually one of the things I’ve written I’m the most proud of.

What’s the TV project?
I’m probably not at liberty to say too much but I’m at the beginning stages of developing a TV project that has a music component.

Is this a project that might also bring you in front of the camera?
I don’t know… part of the fun of Waitress and Jesus Christ Superstar was how fun it is to work in a new medium. And how much that reawakens the adolescence in you and how exciting it is to feel challenged and unsure, like I don’t know what I’m doing -- but do it any way.

We’d love to share story behind a couple of your songs. You mentioned the song “Seriously,” which you wrote for This American Life. That seems like a great place to start.
I’ve been a fan of This American Life for a very long time and am a huge fan and supporter of Barack Obama and his presidency, so it was a dream scenario. I was really, to be honest, very intimidated and really stuck for a while because I felt like I was out of my league and wanting to be so sensitive about putting words into the mouth of anybody but particularly this body, at such a sensitive time. It was during campaigning, so Trump was just coming to life in front of our eyes and I was sort of living in disbelief, so it felt like a pretty hefty assignment but it was really beautiful to search for the base-level humanity of all of it.

I would comb through speeches and talk to Ira Glass about it and several people in the African-American community who were giving me insight about what it feels like in the moment. The song unfolded looking at this 30,000-foot view of where the fuel on the fire was being poured, and whether or not [Obama] was angry. It ended up coming out really beautifully in no small part because we got Leslie Odom Jr. to sing the song and his interpretation was so incredible. It felt very much like a collaborative process, even though I wrote the song alone it felt very much like a community-organized expression.

How about “Love Song,” the one that started it all?
That was a real savior song for me. I was trying to write for my first record for Epic Records and had been vaguely told to keep writing and waiting for the green light to go into the studio. I found myself tacitly understanding that I was being asked to write a song that could be a single on the radio, and I remember one morning driving to my little rehearsal space, which was this metal storage unit friends and I were sharing. And I was listening the radio and I sort of caught myself red-handed trying to bite off the ideas that were already existing there, and I was really furious with myself that I had fallen into the trap of trying to re-create something instead of following my own intuition.

I went into the space and said a little prayer and was asking for a return to that place in myself that just felt pure and I could say what my songwriter self needed to say and not have any attachment to what the label would like. And, truly, it was like a magic moment where the song tumbled out. It wrote itself as quickly as I’d ever written anything. I was certain no one would like it, and after it eventually got sent in as a demo and my A&R rep called and said, “This is incredible,” I thought he was joking. It turned out to be this wonderful return to myself but also ticking the box of what they needed and then I got the green light to move on and make the record.

Did it feel cathartic to write? It’s such an anthem for so many people.
It’s so funny, because it felt like what I was getting wrong in the writing was it was so specific. But it’s been a great teacher to me because I’ve realized the more specific, the more vulnerable, the more willing you are to share the deepest darkest parts of yourself that you feel are only true to you, the more universal they become because everybody has those sides to themselves that need articulation.

Speaking of articulating, do you feel a heightened desire or responsibility to embrace some of the issues occupying so much of our collective social conscience?
I think I feel what a lot of people are feeling, which is a reawakening of a global consciousness, and an awareness of some of these really just primal themes that have been a part of every artistic expression since the dawn of time. Division and identity and hate and fear and love -- all these things that are so alive in our social climate. I want songwriters to speak to that and not pretend they are not a very big part of what our community at large is experiencing. There is this epidemic of depression and anxiety, especially with young people. It’s a vulnerable time anyway, but now more than ever I feel the need to speak to these larger themes and try to parse them out a little bit and at least remind people, You’re not alone in that being a human is really hard, and we’re all trying to figure it out. You’re not alone if you’re confused or you’re fearful or you think you’ve failed in some way. We all end up in those places sometimes.

How important is it to you to write in a distinctly female voice?
In my perfect world there would be a nice balance. Looking through my canon of work I always have felt passionately about the female perspective. Young women are really important to me and giving them a reflection of themselves that is positive is something I’ve spent my whole career hopefully doing because it really matters to me. I want to continue that messaging, but there is a part of me that wants to speak to larger themes that transcend gender. As I’m writing for my next record, I want to go where the energy flows and don’t want anything to limit it.

Do you have a timeframe for your new music?
I’m writing currently and it’s kind of one of those things where you want to press the pedal to the metal, and you don’t know where the car is going to go. I have a handful of songs that I’m proud of but still need some work, and then of course there’s the recording process. But I’m hopeful.

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Jillian Jacqueline photographed on March 6, 2018 at Westlight Studios in Nashville.

Jillian Jacqueline photographed on March 6, 2018 at Westlight Studios in Nashville.
Alysse Gafkjen

Chartbreaker: Jillian Jacqueline on How Heartbreak Anthem 'Reasons' Is Her Ticket to Crossover Success

by Tatiana Cirisano
March 23, 2018, 1:01pm EDT

Chartbreaker is Billboard's monthly series spotlighting an artist making their introduction to the charts.

Listening to Nashville-based singer-songwriter Jillian Jacqueline gush about her recent late night debut on Late Night With Seth Meyers -- one of the “most surreal moments” of her life -- it’s surprising to find the veteran performer so starstruck. After all, she was hand-picked to tour with Kenny Rogers at nine years old, will soon hit the road with Thomas Rhett and Brett Eldredge and has written and recorded alongside the Eagles’ Vince Gill and Richard Marx.

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But Jacqueline is excited, and for good reason. After inking a deal with Big Loud Records -- making her the label’s first female signee -- in October 2016, the 29-year-old went on to release her debut EP Side A in September, a startlingly honest collection of break-up ballads inspired by the fallout of her five-year relationship. Standout “Reasons,” a bittersweet melody about falling out of love, is currently climbing the Country Airplay charts, where it sits at No. 55 for the week of March 24.

“I think the complexity of being a human is my theme,” Jacqueline offers with a wry laugh, but the statement is sincere. “Self-reflection is really important to me -- I want the songs I write to feel like journal entries.” She opens up easily, delving into the times she’d “eat lunch in the bathroom” in high school before finding her footing in college and why releasing her EP felt like “jumping off a cliff naked.”

Jillian Jacqueline photographed on March 6, 2018 at Westlight Studios in Nashville.
Alysse Gafkjen
Jillian Jacqueline photographed on March 6, 2018 at Westlight Studios in Nashville.

Jacqueline’s earliest memories of music take place in the backseat of her mother’s car in Chester Springs, Pa., where she’d sing along to Elvis and Patsy Cline on the way to kindergarten. “I was obsessed with the radio, and it built this tunnel in my head of, ‘That’s what I wanna do,’” she says. “I never questioned it.” By age seven, she began performing at local open mic nights, using a photo she jokes her mom “found in a drawer” as her headshot. With her three sisters, she formed The Little Women Band, named for the Louisa May Alcott book.

Then, around her ninth birthday, an audition listing to join a children’s choir on Kenny Rogers’ holiday-themed Broadway production Christmas from the Heart caught her eye. Jacqueline admits she had little notion of the country legend’s fame -- nor, as she would soon find, how much earning the role would boost her career -- when she and her mother drove three hours to Manhattan after school to make it to tryouts.

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After studying marketing at the University of Philadelphia on the strength of a recommendation letter from Rogers himself, Jacqueline was eager to make music her priority once again. Moving to Nashville after graduation in 2010, she waitressed and took up freelance photography to pay her rent while playing local gigs, eventually catching the attention of Downtown Publishing’s Steve Markland, who signed her in 2014. A record deal with Big Loud followed two years later, as Jacqueline joined a roster of four male artists including Jake Owen. “I realized it wasn't that they needed a girl to fill their roster -- they loved what I did regardless,” she recalls. “On the same coin, they wanted me to be the first female that represents their company, and I think they value what I have to say as a female country artist. By the time I signed, it was just a question of, ‘When can we get the music out?’”

Jillian Jacqueline photographed on March 6, 2018 at Westlight Studios in Nashville.
Alysse Gafkjen
Jillian Jacqueline photographed on March 6, 2018 at Westlight Studios in Nashville.

Jacqueline says she had around 15 songs ready to go by the time she signed to Big Loud, most written in the throes of a breakup with her long-term boyfriend. In fact, she was still living with her ex when she wrote the heartbreaking “Reasons,” now passing 13 million streams on Spotify, and pitched the concept to co-writer Tofer Brown as a fictional story before realizing that it paralleled her life. Soon after, she moved out: “I was just sort of unfolding the truth, and once I put [it] into the song, I couldn't take it back...I was like, ‘Oh shit, this is true.’”

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That same transparency is key throughout the EP, with Jacqueline touching on self-acceptance (“God Bless This Mess”), how sometimes “love and misery look the same” (“Sugar and Salt”) and the ripping-off-the-band-aid moment that comes with every split (“Hate Me”).

By late 2018, she hopes to release her yet-untitled debut LP, which will be “the most bare-bones of me that I can give you.” And already next month, she’ll kick off a string of spring tour dates opening for Rhett and Eldredge. But in Jacqueline’s eyes, the most meaningful milestone she has yet to experience will take her back to the place she first started: in the car, but this time in the front seat. “I’m hoping that pretty soon I’ll be driving down the road, and all of a sudden will hear my name on the radio,” she says now with wonder. “I will definitely have to stop the car and have a moment.”

Watch:

https://www.youtube.com/w...m8d65BBO5E

*

https://www.youtube.com/w...Qq6E4HLyYo

Bruce Springsteen to Perform at Grand Reopening of Asbury Lanes

Bruce Springsteen is set to christen the grand reopening of the Asbury Lanes on June 18, the venue confirmed today.

Springsteen will join Portugal. the Man and the Tangiers Blues Band (featuring photographer Danny Clinch) for an event with proceeds benefiting the Boys and Girls Club of Monmouth County.

To obtain tickets, fans can enter an online lottery through the Asbury Lanes website. The lottery is only available to Asbury Park residents as part of the commitment to honor the local community. The lottery will accept entries until 8 a.m. ET on June 7; Asbury Park Now will also host a giveaway for a pair of tickets as well as a night at the newly-established boutique hotel, the Asbury.

Asbury Lanes — an old bowling alley which opened to the public over Memorial Day Weekend — recently was renovated as a music venue. The seaside town, celebrated in many Springsteen songs, is undergoing a resurgence, with the opening of the new Asbury Hotel and an influx of $300 million from iStar, which is updating and building new properties surrounding the beach and boardwalk areas.

“I think they’ve done a pretty good job with Asbury’s development,” Springsteen told Variety ...over story last year. “I never thought I’d live to see the day when it came back to life in such a vibrant and strong fashion. It could easily have become a mini-mall or a wall of condos but it didn’t, and there’s still a place there; it’s still unique in its own right. That didn’t get erased, and that’s what really matters. It’s not gonna be the place that I grew up in — a little blue-collar resort, or the place that was the genesis of our band — but it’s a lovely, vibrant community right now, and I love going there in the summer now and seeing that beach jammed. I never thought I’d see it again.”

Bruce Springsteen to Perf...ony Awards

Springsteen was recently in Asbury Park inducting fellow E Street Band member Steve Van Zandt into the New Jersey Hall of Fame. He is set to appear this Sunday at the Tony Awards to celebrate his Special Tony Award recognizing the box-office success of “Springsteen on Broadway.”

Asbury Lanes is located at 209 4th Avenue, Asbury Park.

Ricky Martin Joins 'Idol' Star William Hung For an Overdue Duet of 'She Bangs' in Vegas

Mike Windle/Getty Images for iHeartMedia
Ricky Martin on the Honda Stage at the iHeartRadio Theater Los Angeles on Feb. 10, 2015 in Burbank, Calif.

Ricky Martin ended a six show stint at the Monte Carlo Theater in Las Vegas with no shortage of theatricality on Saturday (June 2). A cast of dazzling back-up dancers and wealth of glamorous costuming lit up the stage, but the most shocking moment arrived when the Grammy award-winning singer invited a surprise guest to the stage: American Idol alumnus William Hung.

Hung was introduced to the world with his audition on the Idol’s third season in 2004. Covering Martin’s salsa-inspired “She Bangs,” his abhorrent vocals and accompanying dance moves got virtually all of America laughing, even moving resident Idol hypercritic Simon Cowell to crack a smile.

After reintroducing himself to the crowd, Martin and Hung revived the 2000 uptempo single for their first-ever live duet. Media personality and RuPaul's Drag Race judge Ross Mathews was at the Vegas show and shared a picture of the pair's overdue rendezvous.

Though Hung didn’t snag a coveted golden ticket to Hollywood during his Idol stint, he garnered instant widespread media attention. With numerous late night appearances and a record deal with Koch Entertainment, the singer managed to spin his 15 minutes of fame into hundreds of thousands of record sales from three studio albums.

Hung has long since given up any pop-star aspirations, now self-employed as a traveling motivational speaker. Still, after almost 14 years since his television debut, many seem to remember that ill-fated audition, some even calling for a comeback. See tweets below:

OMG! Thank you!😂😂 Smile of the day! 15 minutes of fame.........still going!

Jimmy Gonzalez, 'Mastermind' Behind the Grammy-Winning Grupo Mazz, Dies at 67

Courtesy Photo
Jimmy Gonzalez
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Gonzalez's legacy includes his influence on Tejano music.

Jimmy Gonzalez, the Grammy-winning Tejano frontman of Group Mazz, has died. He was 67.

The Latin Recording Academy confirmed Wednesday (June 6) that Gonzalez died. Published reports indicate that he had complications from diabetes.

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Neil Portnow, president/CEO of the Recording Academy, and Gabriel Abaroa Jr., president/CEO of the Latin Recording Academy, released a joint statement:

"Jimmy Gonzalez was an influential artist who combined his U.S. roots with traditional Mexican music to create his unique Tejano crossover sound ... his passion for creating music deeply connected to his cultural heritage was admired by many and made a significant impact on the Tejano music community. Our sincerest condolences go out to his family, friends, and loved ones during this difficult time."
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Gonzalez earned three Grammy nominations between 1990 and 2003 and was awarded the best Tejano album Grammy with his band, Jimmy González y El Grupo Mazz, for Si Me Faltas Tu at the 46th Grammy Awards, according to the Recording Academy.

The award-winning musician was also recognized by the Latin Recording Academy with six Latin Grammys throughout his career.

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“Jimmy Gonzalez was the mastermind behind the grupo Mazz sound," said Carlos Alvarez, who has shared the stage with Gonzalez along with Mariachi Campanas de America. "A songwriter, producer and innovator, he simply was a musical genius.

Ralph Santolla to be taken off life support tonight

Ralph Santolla to be taken off live support tomorrow on Wednesday june 6, 2018.

Ralph Santolla was known for performing with many bands such as: Obituary, Iced Earth, Death, Deicide, Millenium, Memorain, Sebastian Bach, Redscream, Toxik, Eyewitness, Hollow, Stare, Melechesh.

In a heartfelt Facebook status Ralph’s son Dorian posted that tomorrow they will take his father off the live support with the following statement:

“We are going to take my father off of assisted living on Wednesday. If any of his friends would like to say goodbye, the family will welcome you at St. Joseph’s tomorrow (Tuesday). He would appreciate the love. Thank you ❤

Santolla was rushed to the hospital on May 31st after suffering a heart attack and falling into a coma.

Ralph‘s mother, Sue Santolla-Rocha, revealed his condition in a Facebook post where she wrote:

“Friends and family, it is out there now, so let me tell you what I know.

Ralph thought he had a spider bite on Saturday. Went to the hospital. It was not a spider bite; it was a blood clot. Tuesday night he fell and he had a heart attack. John Rocha gave him CPR until EMT arrived. His heart had stopped but they got him back.

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“His visuals are stable but he is in a coma. He is on a ventilator, but he is breathing around it. He could breathe on his own, but they do not want to add additional strain to his body. He is in a coma. That is the main concern at this moment. They can fix everything else.”

But today, few hours ago, Ralph was taking out of assisted living by the request of his family.

Image result for Ralph Santolla Sebastian Bach

About Ralph Santolla:

Ralph Santolla was an Italian-American metal guitarist. He played in many bands, most recently with Deicide, and previously with Eyewitness, Death (he never recorded any of their albums, but toured with them in 1993 and appeared in “The Philosopher” video), Millenium, Iced Earth, and the Sebastian Bach band. As of June 3, 2007, it was announced that Santolla would replace Allen West in Obituary for their album Xecutioner’s Return. He is well known for his shred guitar playing style.

Ralph Santolla dead at 48

Posted by: Ivona Bogner , lipanj 6, 2018

Ralph Santolla, Italian-American metal guitarist who played in many bands, most recently Deicide, but also Obituary, Eyewitness, Death, Millenium, Iced Earth, and the Sebastian Bach band, died at 48 on June 6th, 2018.

Image result for Ralph Santolla Sebastian Bach

Ralph’s mother, Sue Santolla-Rocha, on 31 May, 2018, posted on her Facebook account:

Friend and family… It is out there now so let me tell you what I know. Ralph thought he had a spider bite on Saturday. Went to the hospital. It was not a spider bite, it was a blood clot. Tuesday nite he fell and he had a heart attack. John Rocha gave him CPR until EMT arrive. His heart had stopped but they got him back. His visuals are staple but he is in a coma. He is on a ventilator but he is breathing around it he could breathe on his own but they do not want to had additional strain to his body. He is in a coma. That is the main concern at this moment. They can fix everything else. We are having as many of his friends as he can come and talk to him and play music. There has been a minimal movement but some. It is ICU but he is in a private room and they are letting anyone in and they can stay as long as they want. So please pray as he has people all over the world praying and if you can come and spend time with him. Please..he needs to get back from the place that he is in. I love you all…let’s just work on getting him out of the coma if we can. I will keep everyone update the best I can st Joseph hospital. Van dyke rd Tampa.

On 2 June, 2018, she added:

My dear family and wonderful loving friends of Ralph Santolla… Outlook is very poor. We have been so blessed by so many people to have come to see him, over100 a day. The hospital has been so great about letting people come in. Any of you are welcome to come between 8am and 8pm. If you come after 8pm you must come thru ER. Bill Hudson II is playIng Ralph guitar in a concert tonight. I have my boys, Pierre Conze,Devin Grubb, Bill Hudson, Rick Maccani, Raul Andes have been with me every step of this difficult journey..I can not do this without them. God bless you all and Ralph-may he make his face shine upon us all and give us peace, now and forever, Ralph’ son Dorian, Melissa Collas DeMarco, John DeMarco, Ralph’sister, SueSue Graham, John Rocha all are thanking you also for your caring. Deborah Borecki we love you.

On early morning, 6 June, 2018, Sue Santolla-Rochaposted:

Good morning. Just so we all start to heal, Ralph Santolla is not laying on that bed at St Joseph Hospital. He has gone, and he is happy and at peace in heaven. I want to start your day with a little humor. My wonderful mother and Ralph grandmother passed away three years ago. One of my friends was trying to console me, Fred Parker, and had the comment that Ralph would be playing music for his Nannie… It just made me laugh to visualize Ralph playing heavy metal for his Nannie. OMG… It would be so funny… His Nannie was an amazingly strong woman and she would tell him, cut it down, and play something decent. I love my son more than anyone can imagine, my heart is broken… But I know he loved me unconditionally and will always be with me. It is the same with all of us, he will be with you everyone, everyday and his love will surround us now and forever.i wanted to tell everyone that I have thousands of messages… I just can’t deal with it right now but I loveeach of you.

Ralph Santolla was an organ donor so he will live on.

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