BOGOTA – Shakira apparently is showing off her new romance.
The Colombian singer's Twitter site carries a photo of her in the arms of Barcelona football star. It is labeled: "I present my sun to you." That's a play on the name of her latest album, "Sale el Sol," or "The Sun Comes Out."
The singer's press office in Colombia confirmed that it is her official Twitter site.
Neither Shakira nor Pique have officially confirmed they are seeing one another, despite recently published photos of them kissing.
In January, Shakira announced her separation from Argentine Antonio De la Rua after an 11-year relationship.
Wednesday, March 30, 2011
Prosecutor suggests Willie Nelson sing for court
EL PASO, Texas – A Texas prosecutor says Willie Nelson can resolve marijuana possession charges by agreeing to plead guilty, pay a fine — and sing "Blue Eyes Crying in the Rain" for the court.
County Attorney Kit Bramblett says he recommended the penalties to Hudspeth County's judge Becky Dean-Walker. Bramblett says the judge specifically demanded Nelson appear in court instead of pleading by mail, which is a common procedure in such cases.
Bramblett has told The Associated Press that the judge "wants to meet Willie."
Dean-Walker didn't immediately return a call seeking comment Tuesday.
Nelson was arrested Nov. 26 for marijuana possession at a Border Patrol checkpoint after an agent smelled an odor coming from his vehicle and decided to conduct a search.
Nelson's spokeswoman has declined to comment on Bramblett's sentencing suggestion.
County Attorney Kit Bramblett says he recommended the penalties to Hudspeth County's judge Becky Dean-Walker. Bramblett says the judge specifically demanded Nelson appear in court instead of pleading by mail, which is a common procedure in such cases.
Bramblett has told The Associated Press that the judge "wants to meet Willie."
Dean-Walker didn't immediately return a call seeking comment Tuesday.
Nelson was arrested Nov. 26 for marijuana possession at a Border Patrol checkpoint after an agent smelled an odor coming from his vehicle and decided to conduct a search.
Nelson's spokeswoman has declined to comment on Bramblett's sentencing suggestion.
Josh Kelley gets personal on debut country album
NASHVILLE, Tenn. – Josh Kelley is out with his first country album _10 years after he set out to make one.
The singer-songwriter says "Georgia Clay," released last week, was worth the wait because what happened after Nashville first turned him down for a record deal prepared him to make the best record of his career.
Kelley, 31, is now married to actress Katherine Heigl, and they've started a family. Both themes play heavily throughout the album.
"It's about me getting married to Katie. It's about us moving three times. It's about us adopting a little baby girl from South Korea who is now 2-years old," he said in a recent interview. "We got her when she was 9 months old and how that completely changed both of our lives."
Kelley wrote or co-wrote all 11 tracks. Songs like "Baby Blue Eyes," "Don't You Go," "Two Cups of Coffee" and "Learning You" reflect his love for Heigl.
The couple married in Park City, Utah, on Dec. 23, 2007 and adopted Nancy Leigh, or Naleigh as they call her, in the fall of 2009. Kelley wrote the song "Naleigh Moon" about the moment where she accepted him as her dad.
"It was very touching and immediately turns you into a much more selfless person," he said. "To be an entertainer, you have to be pretty self-absorbed, to do it successfully. It just comes with the territory. It's what happens. I just remember when she came, I quit obsessing about everywhere I thought I should be. I just sort of let life happen, and once I let life happen, things started falling in place."
Kelley's younger brother Charles of Grammy-winning country group Lady Antebellum has seen him evolve as an artist through the years.
"His songwriting, it's a lot more honest, and I think he's a lot less selfish as a human being. I think we all are when we get married," said Charles in a phone interview. "It kind of calms you down, makes you kind of realize what's important in life. I think a lot of those songs reflect that."
The Augusta, Ga., native attempted to get a country record deal when he was a college student at the University of Mississippi, but when the Nashville labels passed him up, he signed with Hollywood Records and moved to Los Angeles.
"I was trying to be country from the very beginning, but everybody knows you've got to pay the bills," he said. "So I let those bluegrass songs become pop songs for as long as they could."
He's now thankful for those unanswered prayers.
Kelley went on to have two top 10 hits on Billboard's adult top 40 chart — 2003's "Amazing" and 2005's "Only You." He met Heigl on the set of his music video for "Only You" when she was cast as his love interest.
Kelley parted ways with Hollywood Records in 2005 and bought a house in Nashville. He set up a home studio and started his own label, DNK Records. That inspired Charles to move to Nashville with hometown friend Dave Haywood, where they soon met Hillary Scott and formed Lady Antebellum. The group benefited greatly from Kelley's busy touring schedule and visits to see Heigl in Los Angeles.
"We were able to just kind of have free reign of all these instruments and studio equipment and kind of develop our sound on our own," said Charles.
Kelley released four albums independently to moderate success. The experience of running a label made him a more helpful artist for the label he's on now, MCA Nashville.
"When you run your own label, you're your own manager, you're the treasurer, the CEO, you're the vice president. I don't know. I wore many, many different hats," he said. "But (now) I'm having the best time of my life only wearing one hat."
From watching his brother's career unfold, Charles Kelley said he had a very realistic view of how hard it is to make it in the music business.
"He's had to hustle kind of his whole career, and I think it shows how resilient he is as an artist," said Charles. "He never gave up, and there were definitely times that I think I probably would've thrown in the towel and called it quits. Josh just isn't that kind of guy. He stuck with it."
The song "Gone Like That" gave Kelley his country music break and led to him signing with MCA in 2009. He wrote and recorded it, intending to pitch it to another artist, but his publisher told him no one else would do it justice. That set the ball rolling for "Georgia Clay."
He is now fully prepared to start from square one as a country artist. Kelley has been touring with Miranda Lambert and will be opening selected shows on the North American leg of Taylor Swift's Speak Now World Tour this summer.
"There was no ego involved in this at all. ... I love it. I love the road. I like showing people what I'm made of," he said. "There's a hunger for me to be playing in front of bigger crowds and to have bigger success."
The singer-songwriter says "Georgia Clay," released last week, was worth the wait because what happened after Nashville first turned him down for a record deal prepared him to make the best record of his career.
Kelley, 31, is now married to actress Katherine Heigl, and they've started a family. Both themes play heavily throughout the album.
"It's about me getting married to Katie. It's about us moving three times. It's about us adopting a little baby girl from South Korea who is now 2-years old," he said in a recent interview. "We got her when she was 9 months old and how that completely changed both of our lives."
Kelley wrote or co-wrote all 11 tracks. Songs like "Baby Blue Eyes," "Don't You Go," "Two Cups of Coffee" and "Learning You" reflect his love for Heigl.
The couple married in Park City, Utah, on Dec. 23, 2007 and adopted Nancy Leigh, or Naleigh as they call her, in the fall of 2009. Kelley wrote the song "Naleigh Moon" about the moment where she accepted him as her dad.
"It was very touching and immediately turns you into a much more selfless person," he said. "To be an entertainer, you have to be pretty self-absorbed, to do it successfully. It just comes with the territory. It's what happens. I just remember when she came, I quit obsessing about everywhere I thought I should be. I just sort of let life happen, and once I let life happen, things started falling in place."
Kelley's younger brother Charles of Grammy-winning country group Lady Antebellum has seen him evolve as an artist through the years.
"His songwriting, it's a lot more honest, and I think he's a lot less selfish as a human being. I think we all are when we get married," said Charles in a phone interview. "It kind of calms you down, makes you kind of realize what's important in life. I think a lot of those songs reflect that."
The Augusta, Ga., native attempted to get a country record deal when he was a college student at the University of Mississippi, but when the Nashville labels passed him up, he signed with Hollywood Records and moved to Los Angeles.
"I was trying to be country from the very beginning, but everybody knows you've got to pay the bills," he said. "So I let those bluegrass songs become pop songs for as long as they could."
He's now thankful for those unanswered prayers.
Kelley went on to have two top 10 hits on Billboard's adult top 40 chart — 2003's "Amazing" and 2005's "Only You." He met Heigl on the set of his music video for "Only You" when she was cast as his love interest.
Kelley parted ways with Hollywood Records in 2005 and bought a house in Nashville. He set up a home studio and started his own label, DNK Records. That inspired Charles to move to Nashville with hometown friend Dave Haywood, where they soon met Hillary Scott and formed Lady Antebellum. The group benefited greatly from Kelley's busy touring schedule and visits to see Heigl in Los Angeles.
"We were able to just kind of have free reign of all these instruments and studio equipment and kind of develop our sound on our own," said Charles.
Kelley released four albums independently to moderate success. The experience of running a label made him a more helpful artist for the label he's on now, MCA Nashville.
"When you run your own label, you're your own manager, you're the treasurer, the CEO, you're the vice president. I don't know. I wore many, many different hats," he said. "But (now) I'm having the best time of my life only wearing one hat."
From watching his brother's career unfold, Charles Kelley said he had a very realistic view of how hard it is to make it in the music business.
"He's had to hustle kind of his whole career, and I think it shows how resilient he is as an artist," said Charles. "He never gave up, and there were definitely times that I think I probably would've thrown in the towel and called it quits. Josh just isn't that kind of guy. He stuck with it."
The song "Gone Like That" gave Kelley his country music break and led to him signing with MCA in 2009. He wrote and recorded it, intending to pitch it to another artist, but his publisher told him no one else would do it justice. That set the ball rolling for "Georgia Clay."
He is now fully prepared to start from square one as a country artist. Kelley has been touring with Miranda Lambert and will be opening selected shows on the North American leg of Taylor Swift's Speak Now World Tour this summer.
"There was no ego involved in this at all. ... I love it. I love the road. I like showing people what I'm made of," he said. "There's a hunger for me to be playing in front of bigger crowds and to have bigger success."
Rapper Rick Ross arrested for marijuana
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Rapper Rick Ross was arrested and booked with possession of marijuana in Louisiana after being caught with one gram of the drug in a hotel room, police said on Monday.
Ross, 35, whose real name is William Roberts but adopted a stage name inspired by former Los Angeles drug dealer Ricky Ross, was caught with marijuana on Friday at the Hilton Hotel in Shreveport, Louisiana, police spokesman Bill Goodin said.
Police responded to a citizen's complaint about "an odor of marijuana" coming from the Florida rapper's hotel room, Goodin said. Another man with Ross in the hotel was arrested for possessing eight grams of the drug.
The rapper, whose albums include "Port of Miami," "Teflon Don" and "Deeper than Rap," was charged with one count of a first offense of possession of marijuana and was released from jail on a misdemeanor summons.
In the past the rapper, whose lyrics have bragged of a cash-fueled, drug boss life, has dealt with image problems after it was revealed he had once worked as a corrections officer, an occupation that jars with the hustling image of some rappers, including Ross.
Ross initially denied the reports, then admitted it but maintained his drug-dealing tales of the street were true.
Ross, 35, whose real name is William Roberts but adopted a stage name inspired by former Los Angeles drug dealer Ricky Ross, was caught with marijuana on Friday at the Hilton Hotel in Shreveport, Louisiana, police spokesman Bill Goodin said.
Police responded to a citizen's complaint about "an odor of marijuana" coming from the Florida rapper's hotel room, Goodin said. Another man with Ross in the hotel was arrested for possessing eight grams of the drug.
The rapper, whose albums include "Port of Miami," "Teflon Don" and "Deeper than Rap," was charged with one count of a first offense of possession of marijuana and was released from jail on a misdemeanor summons.
In the past the rapper, whose lyrics have bragged of a cash-fueled, drug boss life, has dealt with image problems after it was revealed he had once worked as a corrections officer, an occupation that jars with the hustling image of some rappers, including Ross.
Ross initially denied the reports, then admitted it but maintained his drug-dealing tales of the street were true.
The top 10 singles and albums on iTunes
iTunes' top 10 selling singles and albums of the week ending March 28, 2011:
Singles:
1. "No Sleep," Wiz Khalifa
2. "Just Can't Get Enough," Black Eyed Peas
3. "E.T. (feat. Kanye West)," Katy Perry
4. "S&M," Rihanna
5. "Forget You," Cee Lo Green
6. "Look At Me Now (feat. Lil Wayne & Busta Rhymes)," Chris Brown
7. "Born This Way," Lady GaGa
8. "On the Floor (feat. Pitbull)," Jennifer Lopez
9. "Blow," Ke$ha
10. "Next 2 You (feat. Justin Bieber)," Chris Brown
Albums:
1. "Songs for Japan," Various Artists
2. "F.A.M.E.," Chris Brown
3. "21," Adele
4. "Angles," The Strokes
5. "Vices & Virtues," Panic! At the Disco
6. "I Remember Me," Jennifer Hudson
7. "Sigh No More," Mumford & Sons
8. "Hello Fear," Kirk Franklin
9. "Sucker Punch," Various Artists
10. "When You're Through Thinking Say Yes," Yellowcard
___
iTunes is owned by Apple Inc.
Singles:
1. "No Sleep," Wiz Khalifa
2. "Just Can't Get Enough," Black Eyed Peas
3. "E.T. (feat. Kanye West)," Katy Perry
4. "S&M," Rihanna
5. "Forget You," Cee Lo Green
6. "Look At Me Now (feat. Lil Wayne & Busta Rhymes)," Chris Brown
7. "Born This Way," Lady GaGa
8. "On the Floor (feat. Pitbull)," Jennifer Lopez
9. "Blow," Ke$ha
10. "Next 2 You (feat. Justin Bieber)," Chris Brown
Albums:
1. "Songs for Japan," Various Artists
2. "F.A.M.E.," Chris Brown
3. "21," Adele
4. "Angles," The Strokes
5. "Vices & Virtues," Panic! At the Disco
6. "I Remember Me," Jennifer Hudson
7. "Sigh No More," Mumford & Sons
8. "Hello Fear," Kirk Franklin
9. "Sucker Punch," Various Artists
10. "When You're Through Thinking Say Yes," Yellowcard
___
iTunes is owned by Apple Inc.
Enrique Iglesias not touring with Britney Spears
LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Oops! The promotional blitz for Britney Spears latest album got off to a rough start on Tuesday when Spanish heartthrob Enrique Iglesias denied that he would go on tour with the pop starlet.
Earlier in the day, Spears had said the two would hit the road for a North American trek beginning in June. But her announcement was greeted almost immediately with skepticism.
Iglesias has dates scheduled in Europe up until six days before the planned tour kickoff in Sacramento on June 17, not giving him much time to coordinate logistics for a brand new trek.
It was also not clear who would be opening for whom, and indeed what musical similarities the two artists have.
His spokeswoman issued a statement later in the day confirming that the tour would not happen.
"Unfortunately, Enrique Iglesias and Britney Spears will not be touring together. Despite initial reports based on formal discussions of the possible run, Enrique will continue on his solo tour in support of his new album 'Euphoria.'"
"Enrique has great respect for Britney and is a longtime fan of her work. He is very sorry for the confusion this might have caused to anyone," the statement said.
His spokeswoman declined to comment further. Reaction from the Spears camp was not immediately available. A representative for the tour's promoter, Live Nation, referred queries to Iglesias' people.
Spears, 29, announced the proposed Iglesias trek during an appearance on the TV talk show "Good Morning America" to promote her seventh album, "Femme Fatale," which was released worldwide this week.
The snafu is rare at a time when publicity campaigns for albums, movies, TV shows and other entertainment products are highly structured.
Indeed Spears started her career as a Mouseketeer in Disney's vaunted marketing machine, and rose to fame in the late 1990s as a wholesome teen idol with bubble gum hits like "... Baby One More Time" and "Oops! ... I Did It Again."
After some highly publicized setbacks a few years ago, Spears' handlers mastered a career comeback that saw the singer play sellout shows on a world tour to promote her 2008 release "Circus." Even allegations that she lip-synced her songs could not dampen fans' enthusiasm.
As for the new album, critics were unimpressed. USA Today said Spears' voice "swamped by the fastidious production, is thin and colorless." The Los Angeles Times said the album "never invites more intimate listening."
Earlier in the day, Spears had said the two would hit the road for a North American trek beginning in June. But her announcement was greeted almost immediately with skepticism.
Iglesias has dates scheduled in Europe up until six days before the planned tour kickoff in Sacramento on June 17, not giving him much time to coordinate logistics for a brand new trek.
It was also not clear who would be opening for whom, and indeed what musical similarities the two artists have.
His spokeswoman issued a statement later in the day confirming that the tour would not happen.
"Unfortunately, Enrique Iglesias and Britney Spears will not be touring together. Despite initial reports based on formal discussions of the possible run, Enrique will continue on his solo tour in support of his new album 'Euphoria.'"
"Enrique has great respect for Britney and is a longtime fan of her work. He is very sorry for the confusion this might have caused to anyone," the statement said.
His spokeswoman declined to comment further. Reaction from the Spears camp was not immediately available. A representative for the tour's promoter, Live Nation, referred queries to Iglesias' people.
Spears, 29, announced the proposed Iglesias trek during an appearance on the TV talk show "Good Morning America" to promote her seventh album, "Femme Fatale," which was released worldwide this week.
The snafu is rare at a time when publicity campaigns for albums, movies, TV shows and other entertainment products are highly structured.
Indeed Spears started her career as a Mouseketeer in Disney's vaunted marketing machine, and rose to fame in the late 1990s as a wholesome teen idol with bubble gum hits like "... Baby One More Time" and "Oops! ... I Did It Again."
After some highly publicized setbacks a few years ago, Spears' handlers mastered a career comeback that saw the singer play sellout shows on a world tour to promote her 2008 release "Circus." Even allegations that she lip-synced her songs could not dampen fans' enthusiasm.
As for the new album, critics were unimpressed. USA Today said Spears' voice "swamped by the fastidious production, is thin and colorless." The Los Angeles Times said the album "never invites more intimate listening."
ZZ Top working on first album in eight years
DETROIT (Billboard) – ZZ Top is "in full production" on a new album, its long-awaited follow-up to 2003's "Mescalero," which guitarist Billy Gibbons predicts will be out "by the end of the year."
Gibbons tells Billboard.com that the Texas trio has been working on the set in both Houston and at his home studio in Los Angeles.
As for the sound, Gibbons notes that he, bassist Dusty Hill and drummer Frank Beard are "still just making a lot of loud noise. We still pose as interpreters of the blues. We can't invent it; It's already been invented. But we can do it our way."
Gibbons adds that the album will be comprised primarily of originals but that the group "might cover a couple of things."
Speaking of covers, a ZZ Top tribute album is also on the way, with Foo Fighters, Nickelback and Kid Rock taking part, according to Gibbons. A representative from Universal South says the collection is still being recorded and compiled with no title, release date or firm track list in place yet.
ZZ Top, meanwhile, hits the road with Lynyrd Skynyrd for the Rebels & Bandoleros Tour that starts May 12 in Wichita, Kansas, and plays 11 dates over three weeks.
Gibbons tells Billboard.com that the Texas trio has been working on the set in both Houston and at his home studio in Los Angeles.
As for the sound, Gibbons notes that he, bassist Dusty Hill and drummer Frank Beard are "still just making a lot of loud noise. We still pose as interpreters of the blues. We can't invent it; It's already been invented. But we can do it our way."
Gibbons adds that the album will be comprised primarily of originals but that the group "might cover a couple of things."
Speaking of covers, a ZZ Top tribute album is also on the way, with Foo Fighters, Nickelback and Kid Rock taking part, according to Gibbons. A representative from Universal South says the collection is still being recorded and compiled with no title, release date or firm track list in place yet.
ZZ Top, meanwhile, hits the road with Lynyrd Skynyrd for the Rebels & Bandoleros Tour that starts May 12 in Wichita, Kansas, and plays 11 dates over three weeks.
Tuesday, March 29, 2011
Beyonce's father will no longer manage her career
NEW YORK – Beyonce will no longer be managed by her father, Mathew Knowles, her publicist said Monday.
The Grammy-winning singer and her father have parted ways "on a business level," publicist Yvette Noel-Schure told The Associated Press in a statement.
"I am grateful for everything he has taught me," Beyonce said in the statement. "I grew up watching both he and my mother manage and own their own businesses. They were hardworking entrepreneurs and I will continue to follow in their footsteps."
She didn't say what led to the split, but her father said in a separate statement to the AP late Monday that the decision was mutual.
Knowles has managed his daughter since she debuted as a teen in the multiplatinum-selling group Destiny's Child in the late 1990s and throughout her superstar career as a solo artist.
Knowles oversaw all aspects of Beyonce, from music to movies to fashion and more. Her career includes 16 Grammy awards, top-grossing movies "Dreamgirls" and "Obsessed," fashion ventures and lucrative endorsements.
The 29-year-old has released three multiplatinum albums — "Dangerously In Love," "B'Day" and "I Am ... Sasha Fierce" — and has 12 Top 10 hits on Billboard's Hot 100 chart, including five No. 1s. Destiny's Child had 11 Top 10 hits on the Hot 100 chart and six No. 1s.
During Beyonce's teen years in Houston, Knowles prepped her, her friend Kelly Rowland and two others for a rising career as an R&B girl group, and Destiny's Child released its self-titled debut in 1998. Their sophomore album, "The Writing's On the Wall," came a year later and garnered multiple hits and two Grammys, but the success also shook up the band and Destiny's Child became a trio with Beyonce, Rowland and Michelle Williams.
The three also released solo albums, all managed by Knowles. He launched his own label, World Music Entertainment, via Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music.
Rowland parted with Knowles as her manager in 2009 and Williams followed a year later.
In the statement, Beyonce stressed her devotion to her father on a personal level.
"He is my father for life and I love my dad dearly. I am grateful for everything he has taught me," Beyonce said.
Knowles also got personal in his statement.
"Business is business and family is family. I love my daughter and am very proud of who she is and all that she has achieved. I look forward to her continued great success," he said.
Knowles and Beyonce's mother, Tina, divorced in 2009 after 29 years of marriage. Tina Knowles worked as a stylist for Destiny's Child and continues to style her daughter. Together they launched a clothing line, House of Dereon.
Noel-Schure didn't comment on who Beyonce's new manager would be.
Knowles said his plans include focusing on his label's work in gospel and inspirational music, where he said the company has made a "tremendous investment."
The Grammy-winning singer and her father have parted ways "on a business level," publicist Yvette Noel-Schure told The Associated Press in a statement.
"I am grateful for everything he has taught me," Beyonce said in the statement. "I grew up watching both he and my mother manage and own their own businesses. They were hardworking entrepreneurs and I will continue to follow in their footsteps."
She didn't say what led to the split, but her father said in a separate statement to the AP late Monday that the decision was mutual.
Knowles has managed his daughter since she debuted as a teen in the multiplatinum-selling group Destiny's Child in the late 1990s and throughout her superstar career as a solo artist.
Knowles oversaw all aspects of Beyonce, from music to movies to fashion and more. Her career includes 16 Grammy awards, top-grossing movies "Dreamgirls" and "Obsessed," fashion ventures and lucrative endorsements.
The 29-year-old has released three multiplatinum albums — "Dangerously In Love," "B'Day" and "I Am ... Sasha Fierce" — and has 12 Top 10 hits on Billboard's Hot 100 chart, including five No. 1s. Destiny's Child had 11 Top 10 hits on the Hot 100 chart and six No. 1s.
During Beyonce's teen years in Houston, Knowles prepped her, her friend Kelly Rowland and two others for a rising career as an R&B girl group, and Destiny's Child released its self-titled debut in 1998. Their sophomore album, "The Writing's On the Wall," came a year later and garnered multiple hits and two Grammys, but the success also shook up the band and Destiny's Child became a trio with Beyonce, Rowland and Michelle Williams.
The three also released solo albums, all managed by Knowles. He launched his own label, World Music Entertainment, via Columbia Records, a division of Sony Music.
Rowland parted with Knowles as her manager in 2009 and Williams followed a year later.
In the statement, Beyonce stressed her devotion to her father on a personal level.
"He is my father for life and I love my dad dearly. I am grateful for everything he has taught me," Beyonce said.
Knowles also got personal in his statement.
"Business is business and family is family. I love my daughter and am very proud of who she is and all that she has achieved. I look forward to her continued great success," he said.
Knowles and Beyonce's mother, Tina, divorced in 2009 after 29 years of marriage. Tina Knowles worked as a stylist for Destiny's Child and continues to style her daughter. Together they launched a clothing line, House of Dereon.
Noel-Schure didn't comment on who Beyonce's new manager would be.
Knowles said his plans include focusing on his label's work in gospel and inspirational music, where he said the company has made a "tremendous investment."
Website to pay $950,000 for posting Beatles hits
LOS ANGELES – A website that sold Beatles songs online for 25 cents apiece before they became legally available has agreed to pay record companies nearly $1 million to settle a federal lawsuit.
U.S. District Judge Josephine Staton Tucker signed off on the settlement between BlueBeat.com and music companies EMI Group PLC, Capitol Records and Virgin Records America on Friday. The judge ruled in December that the site violated the music labels' copyrights and presented unfair competition.
A trial to determine how much BlueBeat owed the companies was scheduled to begin Tuesday in Santa Ana, Calif.
BlueBeat streamed and sold music by the Fab Four and other top-name acts, including Coldplay and Lily Allen, for several days before music companies sued to shut it down in November 2009. By then, the site had already distributed more than 67,000 songs by The Beatles.
The posting of Beatles songs came shortly after the release of the group's re-mastered albums and a pricey box set. A year later, Apple Inc. announced with great fanfare that it was selling Beatles music on its popular music service iTunes.
Within the first week, more than 2 million Beatles songs were purchased online for $1.29 apiece and 450,000 albums were sold.
BlueBeat had denied wrongdoing, claiming owner Hank Risan had pioneered a method called "psycho-acoustic simulation" that resulted in unique versions of copyrighted music.
The judge rejected his arguments and explanations of his technique in her December ruling, noting that Risan's recordings were based on copies of CDs that he had purchased.
Risan said the settlement amount was a fraction of what the companies sought. He said the site, which is still active but doesn't have any Beatles music available, is still working to register copyrights for 800,000 recordings.
"So long as we pay royalties, we can stream their stuff all day and all night without a problem," said BlueBeat's attorney Archie Robinson.
"We basically settled the case for their attorney fees," Robinson said. "I felt that was sort of an acknowledgement on their part that they don't have the damages they claimed."
Russell Frackman, an attorney who represented the recording companies, did not return a phone message seeking comment.
U.S. District Judge Josephine Staton Tucker signed off on the settlement between BlueBeat.com and music companies EMI Group PLC, Capitol Records and Virgin Records America on Friday. The judge ruled in December that the site violated the music labels' copyrights and presented unfair competition.
A trial to determine how much BlueBeat owed the companies was scheduled to begin Tuesday in Santa Ana, Calif.
BlueBeat streamed and sold music by the Fab Four and other top-name acts, including Coldplay and Lily Allen, for several days before music companies sued to shut it down in November 2009. By then, the site had already distributed more than 67,000 songs by The Beatles.
The posting of Beatles songs came shortly after the release of the group's re-mastered albums and a pricey box set. A year later, Apple Inc. announced with great fanfare that it was selling Beatles music on its popular music service iTunes.
Within the first week, more than 2 million Beatles songs were purchased online for $1.29 apiece and 450,000 albums were sold.
BlueBeat had denied wrongdoing, claiming owner Hank Risan had pioneered a method called "psycho-acoustic simulation" that resulted in unique versions of copyrighted music.
The judge rejected his arguments and explanations of his technique in her December ruling, noting that Risan's recordings were based on copies of CDs that he had purchased.
Risan said the settlement amount was a fraction of what the companies sought. He said the site, which is still active but doesn't have any Beatles music available, is still working to register copyrights for 800,000 recordings.
"So long as we pay royalties, we can stream their stuff all day and all night without a problem," said BlueBeat's attorney Archie Robinson.
"We basically settled the case for their attorney fees," Robinson said. "I felt that was sort of an acknowledgement on their part that they don't have the damages they claimed."
Russell Frackman, an attorney who represented the recording companies, did not return a phone message seeking comment.
Rapper Rick Ross arrested for marijuana
NEW YORK (Reuters) – Rapper Rick Ross was arrested and booked with possession of marijuana in Louisiana after being caught with one gram of the drug in a hotel room, police said on Monday.
Ross, 35, whose real name is William Roberts but adopted a stage name inspired by former Los Angeles drug dealer Ricky Ross, was caught with marijuana on Friday at the Hilton Hotel in Shreveport, Louisiana, police spokesman Bill Goodin said.
Police responded to a citizen's complaint about "an odor of marijuana" coming from the Florida rapper's hotel room, Goodin said. Another man with Ross in the hotel was arrested for possessing eight grams of the drug.
The rapper, whose albums include "Port of Miami," "Teflon Don" and "Deeper than Rap," was charged with one count of a first offense of possession of marijuana and was released from jail on a misdemeanor summons.
In the past the rapper, whose lyrics have bragged of a cash-fueled, drug boss life, has dealt with image problems after it was revealed he had once worked as a corrections officer, an occupation that jars with the hustling image of some rappers, including Ross.
Ross initially denied the reports, then admitted it but maintained his drug-dealing tales of the street were true.
Ross, 35, whose real name is William Roberts but adopted a stage name inspired by former Los Angeles drug dealer Ricky Ross, was caught with marijuana on Friday at the Hilton Hotel in Shreveport, Louisiana, police spokesman Bill Goodin said.
Police responded to a citizen's complaint about "an odor of marijuana" coming from the Florida rapper's hotel room, Goodin said. Another man with Ross in the hotel was arrested for possessing eight grams of the drug.
The rapper, whose albums include "Port of Miami," "Teflon Don" and "Deeper than Rap," was charged with one count of a first offense of possession of marijuana and was released from jail on a misdemeanor summons.
In the past the rapper, whose lyrics have bragged of a cash-fueled, drug boss life, has dealt with image problems after it was revealed he had once worked as a corrections officer, an occupation that jars with the hustling image of some rappers, including Ross.
Ross initially denied the reports, then admitted it but maintained his drug-dealing tales of the street were true.
Friend says slain NY DJ was going to buy marijuana
NEW YORK – A friend of slain radio and TV personality DJ Megatron told investigators Monday the two were chatting on the phone as the deejay went out to buy marijuana when the line went dead, likely because he'd been shot.
The friend was on the phone with the 32-year-old deejay, whose real name is Corey McGriff, at around 2 a.m. Sunday when the line suddenly went dead, police said. The deejay, also known as Mega and or Mega McGriff, was later found shot once in the chest. Police said he had been walking to a store near his home on New York's Staten Island.
Police were looking at whether drugs may have played a role in his death. He had a few previous minor arrests for possession of marijuana, but no serious crimes. Police said Monday they do not believe it was a robbery. No arrests have been made.
His manager, Justin Kirkland, known as J. Smoove, said friends and family had no idea why anyone might have attacked the deejay known for his upbeat attitude.
DJ Megatron worked on BET's "106 & Park" music countdown series, mainly in a role interacting with its live audience, the Viacom Inc.-owned network said. But he also did some on-camera work for the show and BET's website, including "What's Good."
The network expressed its condolences to his family and friends.
Rising to the on-air ranks after starting as an intern, DJ Megatron began his career at New York's WKRS-FM, better known as Kiss FM, where deejays remembered him on the air and online Sunday. He also worked at what was then Boston's Hot 97.7, or WBOT-FM, and at Philadelphia's The Beat, or WPHI-FM, according to a bio on his MySpace site.
He was a father of three and also devoted time to charitable events on Staten Island, his manager said.
The friend was on the phone with the 32-year-old deejay, whose real name is Corey McGriff, at around 2 a.m. Sunday when the line suddenly went dead, police said. The deejay, also known as Mega and or Mega McGriff, was later found shot once in the chest. Police said he had been walking to a store near his home on New York's Staten Island.
Police were looking at whether drugs may have played a role in his death. He had a few previous minor arrests for possession of marijuana, but no serious crimes. Police said Monday they do not believe it was a robbery. No arrests have been made.
His manager, Justin Kirkland, known as J. Smoove, said friends and family had no idea why anyone might have attacked the deejay known for his upbeat attitude.
DJ Megatron worked on BET's "106 & Park" music countdown series, mainly in a role interacting with its live audience, the Viacom Inc.-owned network said. But he also did some on-camera work for the show and BET's website, including "What's Good."
The network expressed its condolences to his family and friends.
Rising to the on-air ranks after starting as an intern, DJ Megatron began his career at New York's WKRS-FM, better known as Kiss FM, where deejays remembered him on the air and online Sunday. He also worked at what was then Boston's Hot 97.7, or WBOT-FM, and at Philadelphia's The Beat, or WPHI-FM, according to a bio on his MySpace site.
He was a father of three and also devoted time to charitable events on Staten Island, his manager said.
Ultra Music Festival extends its global reach
MIAMI (Reuters) – Once a humble beach party, Miami's mega-hip Ultra Music Festival is expanding to Asia and Australia after a sellout, three-day rave this past weekend that left revelers nursing a nasty hangover on Monday.
Around 150,000 sun-baked party-goers were whipped into a frenzy in downtown Miami by the Chemical Brothers, Underworld, Armin van Buuren, Tiesto and Moby, among other major international music acts.
Rocks bands such as Duran Duran were added to the traditionally electronica line-up for the 13th Ultra, and organizers unveiled plans for spin-off events in Sydney, Australia and Seoul, South Korea to festivals already taking place in Sao Paulo, Brazil and Ibiza, Spain.
"Ultra has become very international," award-winning singer-songwriter Moby told Reuters. "I love the bombastic spectacle of 20,000 people jumping up and down.
"There's a huge sound system, huge video screen, a huge lighting thing, and I'm just like the little, middle-aged bald guy playing records," added the bespectacled Moby who, on stage at the giant gathering, became a wild-eyed musical dictator to the sweat-drenched, dancing crowd.
The three-day event featured some 200 acts playing a mix of music to outlandishly dressed fans who blew whistles and pumped fists to throbbing electronic beats. Even the on-site fire trucks honked their horns in tune with headline acts.
Founder Russell Faibisch expressed amazement at Ultra's evolution from what began as little more than a small party of friends in Miami to the U.S. music festival season's big kickoff that can attract almost any artist in the world.
"Yeah, it started on the beach," he said with a sheepish grin. "Right now we're booking for 2012. We have the chance to get pretty much anyone. I'm amazed everyday.
"Duran Duran were touring, they've got a new album out...and it was just a good fit."
TREND TOWARD LIVE ACTS
Adam Russakoff, Faibisch's business partner, added that electronica festivals are moving toward more live performances, so it seemed natural to have acts such as Duran Duran, Pendulum, Royksopp, Erasure, Holy Ghost! and others perform.
Duran Duran, who had a string of smash hits such as "Rio" and "Hungry Like the Wolf" in the 1980s, brought the house down on opening night with a set including tracks off their latest release "All You Need is Now."
"Although it's ostensibly a dance festival we've always tried to keep one foot on the dance floor," Duran Duran keyboard player Nick Rhodes told Reuters. "You're never going to have an insane reaction with 50,000 people half of whom probably don't know many of your songs. But we definitely connected with this mob on some level!"
Bassist John Taylor agreed that the band's new material was widely well received by the young. "It is quite empowering the new stuff," he said. "It has like a slightly retro tinge to it, which takes everybody back a few years."
British synthpop duo Erasure confessed to stage fright before playing what was their first show in four years.
"We're a bit nervous," said frontman Andy Bell, ahead of a set consisting exclusively of old hits which received a mixed reception before sun fell over the eight-stage venue.
"When we got here the music was really, really loud and really banging and I was thinking how we were going to fit in with this violence? Also, the audience is very young."
Dutch trance king van Buuren, billed at the Ultra Music Festival as the "world's biggest DJ", conjured a crescendo of sound which triggered crowd hysteria in the huge moshpit.
"Ultra is one of those things that is magical with kids and the younger clubbing crowd," said van Buuren, who also hosted a 12-hour radio show live from Ultra.
"They all know about Ultra. Everybody in the States and abroad wants to go to Ultra. The sound is ridiculous. We could hear it in Miami Beach yesterday all the way from downtown!
"You have to be there if you're a DJ. It's top five in the world for sure. It's legendary. It's kind of a mystical thing."
Around 150,000 sun-baked party-goers were whipped into a frenzy in downtown Miami by the Chemical Brothers, Underworld, Armin van Buuren, Tiesto and Moby, among other major international music acts.
Rocks bands such as Duran Duran were added to the traditionally electronica line-up for the 13th Ultra, and organizers unveiled plans for spin-off events in Sydney, Australia and Seoul, South Korea to festivals already taking place in Sao Paulo, Brazil and Ibiza, Spain.
"Ultra has become very international," award-winning singer-songwriter Moby told Reuters. "I love the bombastic spectacle of 20,000 people jumping up and down.
"There's a huge sound system, huge video screen, a huge lighting thing, and I'm just like the little, middle-aged bald guy playing records," added the bespectacled Moby who, on stage at the giant gathering, became a wild-eyed musical dictator to the sweat-drenched, dancing crowd.
The three-day event featured some 200 acts playing a mix of music to outlandishly dressed fans who blew whistles and pumped fists to throbbing electronic beats. Even the on-site fire trucks honked their horns in tune with headline acts.
Founder Russell Faibisch expressed amazement at Ultra's evolution from what began as little more than a small party of friends in Miami to the U.S. music festival season's big kickoff that can attract almost any artist in the world.
"Yeah, it started on the beach," he said with a sheepish grin. "Right now we're booking for 2012. We have the chance to get pretty much anyone. I'm amazed everyday.
"Duran Duran were touring, they've got a new album out...and it was just a good fit."
TREND TOWARD LIVE ACTS
Adam Russakoff, Faibisch's business partner, added that electronica festivals are moving toward more live performances, so it seemed natural to have acts such as Duran Duran, Pendulum, Royksopp, Erasure, Holy Ghost! and others perform.
Duran Duran, who had a string of smash hits such as "Rio" and "Hungry Like the Wolf" in the 1980s, brought the house down on opening night with a set including tracks off their latest release "All You Need is Now."
"Although it's ostensibly a dance festival we've always tried to keep one foot on the dance floor," Duran Duran keyboard player Nick Rhodes told Reuters. "You're never going to have an insane reaction with 50,000 people half of whom probably don't know many of your songs. But we definitely connected with this mob on some level!"
Bassist John Taylor agreed that the band's new material was widely well received by the young. "It is quite empowering the new stuff," he said. "It has like a slightly retro tinge to it, which takes everybody back a few years."
British synthpop duo Erasure confessed to stage fright before playing what was their first show in four years.
"We're a bit nervous," said frontman Andy Bell, ahead of a set consisting exclusively of old hits which received a mixed reception before sun fell over the eight-stage venue.
"When we got here the music was really, really loud and really banging and I was thinking how we were going to fit in with this violence? Also, the audience is very young."
Dutch trance king van Buuren, billed at the Ultra Music Festival as the "world's biggest DJ", conjured a crescendo of sound which triggered crowd hysteria in the huge moshpit.
"Ultra is one of those things that is magical with kids and the younger clubbing crowd," said van Buuren, who also hosted a 12-hour radio show live from Ultra.
"They all know about Ultra. Everybody in the States and abroad wants to go to Ultra. The sound is ridiculous. We could hear it in Miami Beach yesterday all the way from downtown!
"You have to be there if you're a DJ. It's top five in the world for sure. It's legendary. It's kind of a mystical thing."
Justin Bieber song prompts royalties fight
NEW YORK (Hollywood Reporter) – A pair of artist managers have filed a lawsuit seeking royalties from the hit Justin Bieber song "One Less Lonely Girl."
Vance Tate and Thomas Oliveria claim in a lawsuit filed last week that they represent songwriters Sean Hamilton and Hyuk Shin, who collectively go under the moniker, A-Rex.
In 2008, A-Rex created a song, "One Less Lonely Girl," which ended up on Bieber's first album the following year and is credited as a collaboration among R&B star Usher, Hamilton, Shin, and two others.
Tate and Oliveria claim they are entitled to 10% of publishing royalties associated with A-Rex's share of the song.
The plaintiffs estimate that's worth at least $200,000 and are seeking damages for breach of contract, fraud, conversion, and copyright infringement. In addition to Hamilton and Shin, the suit also names EMI Music Publishing and LA Reid Music Publishing Company, an entity connected with Bieber's label boss Antonio "L.A." Reid.
Since the song was introduced by Bieber, with an accompanying music video, the title has become a slogan of sorts for his young female fans. The singer has sold scarves and red roses branded with "One Less Lonely Girl."
Explaining the song's concept, Bieber told MTV News, "I think it's really important these girls have something so they can be one less lonely girl."
Vance Tate and Thomas Oliveria claim in a lawsuit filed last week that they represent songwriters Sean Hamilton and Hyuk Shin, who collectively go under the moniker, A-Rex.
In 2008, A-Rex created a song, "One Less Lonely Girl," which ended up on Bieber's first album the following year and is credited as a collaboration among R&B star Usher, Hamilton, Shin, and two others.
Tate and Oliveria claim they are entitled to 10% of publishing royalties associated with A-Rex's share of the song.
The plaintiffs estimate that's worth at least $200,000 and are seeking damages for breach of contract, fraud, conversion, and copyright infringement. In addition to Hamilton and Shin, the suit also names EMI Music Publishing and LA Reid Music Publishing Company, an entity connected with Bieber's label boss Antonio "L.A." Reid.
Since the song was introduced by Bieber, with an accompanying music video, the title has become a slogan of sorts for his young female fans. The singer has sold scarves and red roses branded with "One Less Lonely Girl."
Explaining the song's concept, Bieber told MTV News, "I think it's really important these girls have something so they can be one less lonely girl."
Wiz Khalifa gets out his "Rolling Papers"
NEW YORK (Reuters) – There was a clear winner at February's Super Bowl, but it wasn't the Green Bay Packers.
Pittsburgh-based rapper Wiz Khalifa, whose major label debut "Rolling Papers" drops on Tuesday, was enjoying the success of his first big hit, "Black and Yellow." The song, a tribute to his city, was adopted as the unofficial fight song of the Pittsburgh Steelers who played the Packers in professional football's championship.
Khalifa's team may have lost that day, but shortly thereafter the 23-year-old whose mellow and melodic raps often focus on women and marijuana, had the top song in the United States after five years of quietly making a name for himself.
Perhaps the most covered and reworked song of the year, "Black and Yellow" has spawned countless imitations, including "Black and Guido" an interracial love song from Jersey Shore cast member Vinny Guadagnino and "White and Purple" an ode to Northwestern University.
"A lot of stuff that has happened has come by surprise," said Wiz, reflecting on the events of the last several months, "I'm really humbled by it."
The most exciting thing that has happened, has been working with rap superstar Snoop Dogg. The two are collaborating on a comedy film and its soundtrack titled "High School" and Wiz will appear on the elder rapper's upcoming LP, "Doggumentary."
Wiz, whose real name is Cameron Thomaz, was raised by military parents who frequently moved when he was a small child, living in Japan and Germany before settling in Pennsylvania. He began rapping at 9-years-old and by his teens was selling CDs in the hallways of his school.
"My mom and dad, they're proud of me," said Wiz, "this is what I've been working on since I was little. Since day one. We grew up listening to everything. I combine it in my music. That's what makes my sound -- just being a fan of everything."
RAPPER ON THE RISE
Prior to releasing "Black and Yellow" last fall, Wiz made several well-received mixtapes and independent albums. In 2006, Rolling Stone magazine labeled him a new artist to watch.
He signed with Warner Brothers records in 2008 and released "Say Yeah" a party song that sampled Dutch techno-pop group Alice Deejay. But his relationship with Warner Brothers dissolved soon after, and the rapper didn't sign another major label deal until joining Atlantic Records last year.
Despite the years of work leading up to the release of "Rolling Papers," Wiz says he takes no offense to being called a fresh face. "I still feel like a new artist. I'm still new on a mainstream level and new on a lot of people's radar."
He suffered a setback last November when police in Greenville, North Carolina arrested Wiz and members of his entourage after smelling marijuana backstage at a concert. Upon his release, the rapper said via Twitter, "jail sux."
Wiz claims to have become more disciplined leading up to his Atlantic debut, "My lifestyle hasn't completely changed but everything is more professional now. It has to be, it's just part of the job."
Although, "Rolling Papers" is expected to be one of the biggest hip-hop albums of the year, Wiz seemed calm ahead of its release and refused to get caught up in his own hype.
"I don't have any expectations," said Wiz. "I still got a lot of dues to pay. Even though I'm in the game now, some people don't think it will last. I still have to prove them wrong."
Pittsburgh-based rapper Wiz Khalifa, whose major label debut "Rolling Papers" drops on Tuesday, was enjoying the success of his first big hit, "Black and Yellow." The song, a tribute to his city, was adopted as the unofficial fight song of the Pittsburgh Steelers who played the Packers in professional football's championship.
Khalifa's team may have lost that day, but shortly thereafter the 23-year-old whose mellow and melodic raps often focus on women and marijuana, had the top song in the United States after five years of quietly making a name for himself.
Perhaps the most covered and reworked song of the year, "Black and Yellow" has spawned countless imitations, including "Black and Guido" an interracial love song from Jersey Shore cast member Vinny Guadagnino and "White and Purple" an ode to Northwestern University.
"A lot of stuff that has happened has come by surprise," said Wiz, reflecting on the events of the last several months, "I'm really humbled by it."
The most exciting thing that has happened, has been working with rap superstar Snoop Dogg. The two are collaborating on a comedy film and its soundtrack titled "High School" and Wiz will appear on the elder rapper's upcoming LP, "Doggumentary."
Wiz, whose real name is Cameron Thomaz, was raised by military parents who frequently moved when he was a small child, living in Japan and Germany before settling in Pennsylvania. He began rapping at 9-years-old and by his teens was selling CDs in the hallways of his school.
"My mom and dad, they're proud of me," said Wiz, "this is what I've been working on since I was little. Since day one. We grew up listening to everything. I combine it in my music. That's what makes my sound -- just being a fan of everything."
RAPPER ON THE RISE
Prior to releasing "Black and Yellow" last fall, Wiz made several well-received mixtapes and independent albums. In 2006, Rolling Stone magazine labeled him a new artist to watch.
He signed with Warner Brothers records in 2008 and released "Say Yeah" a party song that sampled Dutch techno-pop group Alice Deejay. But his relationship with Warner Brothers dissolved soon after, and the rapper didn't sign another major label deal until joining Atlantic Records last year.
Despite the years of work leading up to the release of "Rolling Papers," Wiz says he takes no offense to being called a fresh face. "I still feel like a new artist. I'm still new on a mainstream level and new on a lot of people's radar."
He suffered a setback last November when police in Greenville, North Carolina arrested Wiz and members of his entourage after smelling marijuana backstage at a concert. Upon his release, the rapper said via Twitter, "jail sux."
Wiz claims to have become more disciplined leading up to his Atlantic debut, "My lifestyle hasn't completely changed but everything is more professional now. It has to be, it's just part of the job."
Although, "Rolling Papers" is expected to be one of the biggest hip-hop albums of the year, Wiz seemed calm ahead of its release and refused to get caught up in his own hype.
"I don't have any expectations," said Wiz. "I still got a lot of dues to pay. Even though I'm in the game now, some people don't think it will last. I still have to prove them wrong."
Review: High hopes for heavy metal Sinatra tribute
Various Artists "Sin-atra" (Eagle Rock)
Just what makes those heavy metal rockers
Think they can sing like 'ol Frank Sinatra?
Everyone knows a rocker can't sound like Sinatra
But they've got high hopes.
And some of those hopes are even justified on "Sin-atra," an interesting and most unexpected heavy metal tribute album to Frank Sinatra. This is where the Chairman of the Board meets the power chord.
The best here — by far — is Twisted Sister frontman Dee Snider's version of "It Was A Very Good Year," a preening, insistent remake somewhat reminiscent of Queen's "Innuendo" that lets Snider stretch his vocal talents into the higher ranges while remaining true to the spirit of the original.
Most of the songs on "Sin-atra" fall into two distinct categories: those that embrace the melody that was Sinatra's hallmark, and those that bash melody in the head, stomp on its broken body, and then floss with it. Falling firmly into the latter category is the opener, "New York, New York" by Strapping Young Lad's Devin Townsend. This track is so aggressively, over-the-top awful that it sounds like a bad Jack Black parody. The screams, growls and campy ringmaster-like asides will doubtless have Francis Albert Sinatra spinning in his grave.
"High Hopes" by Franky Perez of Scars on Broadway, and "Love And Marriage" by Elias Soriano of Nonpoint, are also Sinatra heresy: The hardcore, Pantera-like menace just doesn't work here.
The melodic camp fares much better, led by Queensryche's Geoff Tate on "Summerwind." His soaring vocals perfectly fit the bill here, capturing the smoothness and class that defined Sinatra's music, only four registers higher.
Glenn Hughes (Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, Black Country Communion) is seemingly everywhere these days, and he's here, too, adding a soulful bluesy turn on "I've Got You Under My Skin."
Former Judas Priest singer Tim "Ripper" Owens shoots and scores with "Witchcraft." The remake would have made an excellent Judas Priest song.
Cheap Trick's Robin Zander tackles "Fly Me To The Moon," but his softer-edged vocals clash with the harsh foundation of the track's guitar, bass and drums. Mr. Big's Eric Martin fares better on "Lady Is A Tramp," and it's worth the entire price of the album just to hear Anthrax's Joey Belladonna croon "doo-be-doo-be-doo" on "Strangers In The Night."
CHECK THIS TRACK OUT: Warrant's Jani Lane closes out the disc with a decent remake of "That's Life," with a tasty guitar solo from Richie Kotzen. But what this track really proves is how much better David Lee Roth did it 25 years ago, with a lot more of the Sinatra swagger and showmanship that really pushes the song across the finish line.
Just what makes those heavy metal rockers
Think they can sing like 'ol Frank Sinatra?
Everyone knows a rocker can't sound like Sinatra
But they've got high hopes.
And some of those hopes are even justified on "Sin-atra," an interesting and most unexpected heavy metal tribute album to Frank Sinatra. This is where the Chairman of the Board meets the power chord.
The best here — by far — is Twisted Sister frontman Dee Snider's version of "It Was A Very Good Year," a preening, insistent remake somewhat reminiscent of Queen's "Innuendo" that lets Snider stretch his vocal talents into the higher ranges while remaining true to the spirit of the original.
Most of the songs on "Sin-atra" fall into two distinct categories: those that embrace the melody that was Sinatra's hallmark, and those that bash melody in the head, stomp on its broken body, and then floss with it. Falling firmly into the latter category is the opener, "New York, New York" by Strapping Young Lad's Devin Townsend. This track is so aggressively, over-the-top awful that it sounds like a bad Jack Black parody. The screams, growls and campy ringmaster-like asides will doubtless have Francis Albert Sinatra spinning in his grave.
"High Hopes" by Franky Perez of Scars on Broadway, and "Love And Marriage" by Elias Soriano of Nonpoint, are also Sinatra heresy: The hardcore, Pantera-like menace just doesn't work here.
The melodic camp fares much better, led by Queensryche's Geoff Tate on "Summerwind." His soaring vocals perfectly fit the bill here, capturing the smoothness and class that defined Sinatra's music, only four registers higher.
Glenn Hughes (Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, Black Country Communion) is seemingly everywhere these days, and he's here, too, adding a soulful bluesy turn on "I've Got You Under My Skin."
Former Judas Priest singer Tim "Ripper" Owens shoots and scores with "Witchcraft." The remake would have made an excellent Judas Priest song.
Cheap Trick's Robin Zander tackles "Fly Me To The Moon," but his softer-edged vocals clash with the harsh foundation of the track's guitar, bass and drums. Mr. Big's Eric Martin fares better on "Lady Is A Tramp," and it's worth the entire price of the album just to hear Anthrax's Joey Belladonna croon "doo-be-doo-be-doo" on "Strangers In The Night."
CHECK THIS TRACK OUT: Warrant's Jani Lane closes out the disc with a decent remake of "That's Life," with a tasty guitar solo from Richie Kotzen. But what this track really proves is how much better David Lee Roth did it 25 years ago, with a lot more of the Sinatra swagger and showmanship that really pushes the song across the finish line.
Review: Spooky stuff from Mountain Goats
The Mountain Goats, "All Eternals Deck" (Merge)
Dread dominates the latest long player from the Mountain Goats. "Never sleep," lead singer John Darnielle counsels midway through the album. "Stay awake," he advises a song later.
There's fear here, but resolute resilience too — the centerpiece is a song about Charles Bronson. As always, the Goats' lit rock provides layers of imagery, and parsing these lyrics will take fans until the fall semester.
"All Eternals Deck" refers to a fortune teller's deck of cards, and Darnielle offers his prediction for the future: We're doomed. He drew inspiration from 1970s occult movies, and song titles reference vampires, serpents, scorpions and Judy Garland's autopsy.
The Goats consider these eerie subjects in short songs with minimalist trio arrangements. While Darnielle's English-major vocals and strummed guitar are front and center, occasional frills keep things interesting. For example, piano and shimmering strings transform a song titled "Outer Scorpion Squadron" into pristine chamber pop. Now that's spooky.
CHECK THIS TRACK OUT: The album's most straightforward lyrics can be found on the droll "For Charles Bronson," which explains the late actor's secrets to success. "Stay cool and seldom speak," Darnielle sings. "Try to hold the gun straight."
Dread dominates the latest long player from the Mountain Goats. "Never sleep," lead singer John Darnielle counsels midway through the album. "Stay awake," he advises a song later.
There's fear here, but resolute resilience too — the centerpiece is a song about Charles Bronson. As always, the Goats' lit rock provides layers of imagery, and parsing these lyrics will take fans until the fall semester.
"All Eternals Deck" refers to a fortune teller's deck of cards, and Darnielle offers his prediction for the future: We're doomed. He drew inspiration from 1970s occult movies, and song titles reference vampires, serpents, scorpions and Judy Garland's autopsy.
The Goats consider these eerie subjects in short songs with minimalist trio arrangements. While Darnielle's English-major vocals and strummed guitar are front and center, occasional frills keep things interesting. For example, piano and shimmering strings transform a song titled "Outer Scorpion Squadron" into pristine chamber pop. Now that's spooky.
CHECK THIS TRACK OUT: The album's most straightforward lyrics can be found on the droll "For Charles Bronson," which explains the late actor's secrets to success. "Stay cool and seldom speak," Darnielle sings. "Try to hold the gun straight."
Leading Norwegian actress Wenche Foss dies
OSLO, Norway – Wenche Foss, a leading Norwegian actress, died on Monday after a long illness, a family spokesman said. She was 93.
Since her debut in 1935, Foss had acted in many theater, film and television productions. She also was a major figure in the Scandinavian country's social circles and championed various causes, including promoting cancer awareness.
The actress, who had contracted breast cancer more that 30 years ago, spoke about it publicly to help others with the condition. Foss also was esteemed for her charity efforts and for helping children with Down syndrome, which her son died of.
Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg described Foss, who died in a hospital, as "one of our dearest actors." The local media often referred to her as "Norway's diva."
Although not well-known abroad, Foss held an almost unrivaled position on the Norwegian stage and was a proficient mezzo-soprano who occasionally performed in operas.
She is survived by a son, Oslo Mayor Fabian Stang, and two grandchildren.
Since her debut in 1935, Foss had acted in many theater, film and television productions. She also was a major figure in the Scandinavian country's social circles and championed various causes, including promoting cancer awareness.
The actress, who had contracted breast cancer more that 30 years ago, spoke about it publicly to help others with the condition. Foss also was esteemed for her charity efforts and for helping children with Down syndrome, which her son died of.
Norwegian Prime Minister Jens Stoltenberg described Foss, who died in a hospital, as "one of our dearest actors." The local media often referred to her as "Norway's diva."
Although not well-known abroad, Foss held an almost unrivaled position on the Norwegian stage and was a proficient mezzo-soprano who occasionally performed in operas.
She is survived by a son, Oslo Mayor Fabian Stang, and two grandchildren.
Rapper Rick Ross charged with marijuana possession
SHREVEPORT, La. – Rapper Rick Ross has been arrested in Louisiana on a marijuana possession charge.
Police spokesman Bill Goodin said Monday that Ross, whose real name is William Roberts II, was issued a misdemeanor summons and released after Friday night's arrest.
Roberts, known for such albums as "Teflon Don" and "Deeper Than Rap," was arrested after police responded to a complaint about the smell of marijuana at the Hilton Hotel.
Upon checking, Goodin said police confiscated 1 gram of what investigators believed to be marijuana.
An official with the rapper's record label did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.
Police spokesman Bill Goodin said Monday that Ross, whose real name is William Roberts II, was issued a misdemeanor summons and released after Friday night's arrest.
Roberts, known for such albums as "Teflon Don" and "Deeper Than Rap," was arrested after police responded to a complaint about the smell of marijuana at the Hilton Hotel.
Upon checking, Goodin said police confiscated 1 gram of what investigators believed to be marijuana.
An official with the rapper's record label did not immediately respond to an email seeking comment.
Oliver Stone lands distributor for drugs caper
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Universal has closed a deal to distribute "Savages," the latest project from Oliver Stone.
The adaptation of Don Winslow's latest comedic novel follows two beach-bum marijuana dealers in southern California who run afoul of a ruthless Mexican female druglord. She kidnaps the duo's mutual girlfriend.
Jennifer Lawrence was in talks to play the girlfriend, named O or Ophelia, but the Oscar-nominated "Winter's Bone" actress bowed out when she landed the lead role in "Hunger Games."
Aaron Johnson ("Kick-Ass"), Taylor Kitsch ("Battleship"), Benicio del Toro and Salma Hayek are in various stages of discussions to board the project.
Stone is eyeing a June shoot.
The adaptation of Don Winslow's latest comedic novel follows two beach-bum marijuana dealers in southern California who run afoul of a ruthless Mexican female druglord. She kidnaps the duo's mutual girlfriend.
Jennifer Lawrence was in talks to play the girlfriend, named O or Ophelia, but the Oscar-nominated "Winter's Bone" actress bowed out when she landed the lead role in "Hunger Games."
Aaron Johnson ("Kick-Ass"), Taylor Kitsch ("Battleship"), Benicio del Toro and Salma Hayek are in various stages of discussions to board the project.
Stone is eyeing a June shoot.
The Hollywood superlawyer whose death went unnoticed
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – For Arthur Crowley, messy personal lives were good for business.
Crowley, whom legendary producer Robert Evans once called "the toughest Irishman attorney west of Chicago," practically invented one of the stock characters of the current tabloid world: the celebrity divorce lawyer.
Today, few things move newsstand sales and boost online traffic more than broken vows. But long before the likes of Hollywood superlawyer Laura Wasser regularly made headlines extricating Angelina Jolie, Christina Aguilera and Ryan Reynolds from failed marriages, Crowley -- whose death one year ago at the age of 85 drew strangely little notice -- was turning big-league divorces into can't-miss showbiz theater.
"He was, in his day, the most famous trial lawyer in Los Angeles," says prominent entertainment attorney Bert Fields.
Known for his outrageous legal gambits, Crowley won a $20 million settlement for Johnny Carson's third wife, $42 million for the first wife of then Los Angeles Lakers owner Jack Kent Cooke, dug up dirt on Steve McQueen, sued Howard Hughes and helped divvy up the Frank Sinatra estate.
Crowley learned to play rough with the powerful and famous by staring down all of Hollywood in the notorious Confidential magazine libel trial of 1957. Representing the publication -- the National Enquirer of its day -- in a case brought against it by the state of California, the attorney subpoenaed more than 100 stars including Elvis Presley and Clark Gable to testify whether stories about them were true. (Perhaps the most infamous was an article alleging that actress Maureen O'Hara all but had sex at the back of Grauman's Chinese Theater.)
It was said that as a result of Crowley's ploy, half the town hurried to vacation in Mexico. The attorney made such a name for himself with the case that when he was sued four years later in a paternity matter by a former Miss USA, the well-known ladies' man garnered headlines in the Los Angeles Times.
But when Crowley -- whom colleagues describe as a brilliant attorney but an often-distant co-worker -- passed away April 20, 2010, of unknown causes, the Los Angeles Times didn't memorialize him. In fact, Crowley slipped away without a single media outlet -- including the New York Times, which had spilled plenty of ink on his cases -- taking note of his five-decade-plus career. Indeed, only a 50-word paid obituary in the Los Angeles Times noted his death, describing Crowley, who ran his own namesake firm, as a "WWII vet, famed trial attorney and loving father," but offering little else.
The only tangible reminder of Crowley is his Holmby Hills mansion -- a three-acre spread near the estates of Paramount chief Brad Grey and acting couple Danny DeVito and Rhea Perlman -- which is on the market for $23 million. Attempts to contact Crowley's family through the real estate agent selling the property were unsuccessful, and phone calls to a handful of others believed to be related to Crowley went unanswered or unreturned.
It was a surprisingly quiet send-off for a Hollywood player who for years ruffled feathers in a town known for having a long memory. Former Crowley client Joanna Carson, third wife of the late talk-show king, is baffled by the lack of public notice. "It of course saddened me," she says. Like several other friends of the lawyer, she learned of his death by word-of-mouth. Imagine, for example, if there hadn't been obituaries penned for the equally colorful Johnnie Cochran.
Cochran, in his made-for-the-airwaves defense of O.J. Simpson, helped usher in the 24/7 TV news cycle. Crowley's career was likewise on the leading edge of a seismic shift in both the coverage of news and what's deemed newsworthy, changes that eventually would give rise to the likes of TMZ. The current preoccupation with Hollywood divorces and the endless war between stars and the tabloids were only nascent developments when Crowley came onto the scene in the 1950s. He soon helped put them front and center.
It's worth noting that while Crowley's family wouldn't give interviews for this report, he is best known for defending another publication's right to run what it considered news. Confidential, which debuted in 1952, was America's first no-holds-barred tabloid magazine. It broke ground with its reporting tactics: Sources were paid for information and required to sign affidavits vouching for it. The magazine was run by publisher Robert Harrison, who had cut his teeth in the 1940s putting out risque "girlie" magazines including Wink and Eyeful. He installed his niece, Marjorie Meade, as head of Hollywood Research Inc., Confidential's clandestine investigative bureau.
Although established media outlets panned the bimonthly Confidential for its loose journalism standards, it was an instant hit, at its peak outranking even Time in circulation. There were stories about leading men who beat their wives, leading ladies who were neglectful mothers and gay actors who kept secret their sexual orientation. One cataloged the female lovers Marlene Dietrich had taken, while another insinuated that Liberace had brazenly pursued a young male press agent.
The magazine's brash approach inevitably angered the studios. A handful of actors employed bulldog lawyer Jerry Geisler, who preceded Crowley as a leading Hollywood attorney, to sue the magazine for libel. By early 1957, the studios had pressured California Attorney General Pat Brown to act against Confidential. Brown, who would become governor two years later and was the father of the current governor, effectively banned the magazine in the state by threatening distributors with prosecution, according to "Shocking True Story," Henry E. Scott's 2010 book on the publication.
In May 1957, Brown went after the magazine more directly, indicting Harrison, Meade and several others associated with Confidential for conspiracy to commit criminal libel. The stakes were high: Harrison and his crew faced not only big fines but also jail time. Crowley, just 32, was hired to defend them.
When the trial began August 7, 1957, reporters from dozens of newspapers were in attendance, including a correspondent from Paris Match and four from London, according to Shocking True Story. (The Hollywood Reporter, apart from a few mentions in its Rambling Reporter gossip column, stayed away from writing about Confidential. Hy Hollinger, a former THR reporter who worked at Variety in the 1950s, says the trade publications "mainly ignored" Confidential because of a level of "decorum" that made it uncommon to go after other publications.)
Crowley came armed with an over-the-top plan: If the studios were going to claim the articles in the magazine weren't true, then the stars had better prove it. He tasked famed private eye Fred Otash with delivering more than 100 subpoenas. Many actors successfully avoided Otash, including Sinatra and Gregory Peck, who headed for Las Vegas.
"It looked like the exodus from Egypt," said Crowley in a 2003 interview with Vanity Fair.
But not everyone was so lucky: Actor Tab Hunter, then a 26-year-old closeted heartthrob, was subpoenaed and ordered to appear in court. Hunter had been the subject of a story whispering that he'd been at a pajama party staged "strictly for boys."
"I was scared to death," Hunter says today. He came out publicly in his 2005 autobiography, Tab Hunter Confidential. "You had to be under oath, and I don't lie."
Ultimately, Hunter wasn't called to testify, which would have undoubtedly ruined his career; Judge Herbert Walker ruled that only a limited number of Confidential stories were at issue. Some stars -- including Dorothy Dandridge, who denied an article about a lovers' tryst in the Lake Tahoe woods -- did take the stand, though they did so as witnesses for the prosecution. Still, Crowley's strategy seemed to have worked.
"He was very crafty," says Scott, who interviewed the attorney at the Baroda residence in 1996. "He emptied the town out, and what it did was the studios lobbied the prosecution and said, 'Maybe we should think about this. Maybe we should let up on these guys.'"
After a two-week deliberation, the jury was unable to render a verdict. Before a retrial could proceed, the studios and Harrison -- who, already saddled with a hefty legal bill, was not eager to face charges again -- worked out a deal by which Confidential would no longer "publish exposes of the private lives of movie stars," according to Shocking True Story. The magazine was irrevocably damaged. With the lack of ribald stories, circulation plunged, and Harrison sold the publication in 1958; it soldiered on until 1978. But the magazine lived on in the James Ellroy novel "L.A. Confidential" and its 1997 film adaptation, both of which fictionalized it as the tabloid Hush-Hush.
Crowley's success in keeping his clients out of prison raised his profile dramatically. It wasn't long before the politically conservative lawyer, a fastidious and fashionable dresser who enjoyed both big-game hunting and ballroom dancing, became a regular in the L.A. Times' society pages. In 1962, Crowley married actress Jana Lund, who gave Elvis his first onscreen kiss in the 1957 film "Loving You."
Nearly a year after the Confidential case, Crowley, representing Lana Turner's ex-husband Stephen Crane, helped clear his client's young daughter, Cheryl, in the stabbing death of Turner's boyfriend Johnny Stompanato, one of gangster Mickey Cohen's bodyguards. A month after the April 1958 ruling, Crowley again represented Crane, this time in a custody fight with Turner over their child. A string of high-profile cases followed, including suits that involved Oscar-winning actress Dorothy Malone, Vic Damone, Debbie Reynolds and Mel Torme.
In many of the cases, Crowley was on the side of the lesser celebrity, a role that -- like his position in the Confidential case -- essentially pitted him against the powers that be.
Subtlety wasn't Crowley's strong suit. Attorney Sorrell Trope, who attended law school with Crowley, recalls the day his longtime friend, who was prematurely bald, began wearing a toupee. Without prior announcement, Crowley made the switch in 1967 while in the midst of a trial. Says Trope: "The first two days of the trial, he comes in with his bald head, and the next day he comes in with this white toupee. The judge almost fell off the bench."
But Crowley's swagger served him well. That was certainly the case in the 1979 divorce of Cooke, the late Lakers and Washington Redskins owner, from Crowley's client, Barbara Jean Carnegie. The $42 million sum he extracted from Cooke, north of $100 million in today's dollars, was the largest divorce settlement at the time.
It wasn't the first time Crowley was playing in the biggest of big leagues. In 1963, he personally lodged a $12 million lawsuit against industrialist Hughes for allegedly wiretapping his telephone, though the case was dismissed in 1968. Crowley's connection to Hughes stemmed from the attorney's earlier representation of another lawyer who was trying to collect allegedly unpaid fees from the reclusive businessman.
Then there was Crowley's work in the early 1970s for producer Evans. In his 1994 memoir, "The Kid Stays in the Picture," he wrote of employing Crowley when he got into a skirmish with actor McQueen, who married Ali MacGraw after her divorce from Evans. McQueen wanted to adopt MacGraw and Evans' son; however, Crowley compiled an apparently damning "dossier almost a foot in height" on McQueen, which ended the actor's efforts.
In the 1985 Carson divorce, Crowley crafted another cagey approach -- but he might have gone too far. In addition to demanding a temporary monthly allowance of $220,000, Crowley argued that his client should be entitled to more than half of the couple's community property because of so-called celebrity goodwill. His reasoning centered on the notion that the talk-show host's brand was enhanced during the marriage, thus requiring additional compensation for Crowley's client.
According to Norman Oberstein, who represented Johnny Carson after he had dismissed another attorney, the judge ultimately authorized $35,000 a month in temporary support. And Crowley's argument for celebrity goodwill was rebuffed. "He certainly did all the right things; he was always a fierce adversary and very well-regarded, and it was a lot of fun to go against him," recalls Oberstein.
Crowley was paid handsomely for his efforts. According to James A. Albert's 1989 book "Pay Dirt: Divorces of the Rich and Famous," Crowley charged Joanna Carson $260 an hour and $520 an hour on Sundays. Several lawyers said Crowley's standard rate was quite high for the mid-1980s -- equivalent to $1,000 an hour or more today -- and none had ever heard of an attorney who billed a higher rate on Sundays.
Joanna Carson still walked away with a neat $20 million in cash and property. "I admired him greatly; if you had a problem about something, once you were friends, you could always call him," Carson says.
The attorney lived a lifestyle commensurate to his paychecks, attending black-tie charity galas; dining with the Club of the Vikings, an elite private dining group, at the since-shuttered hotspot Scandia restaurant; and throwing get-togethers with live music at the fully staffed Baroda house. The estate, it seems, had a personality that matched its owner. The living room was decorated with taxidermied trophy animals bagged during Crowley's hunting trips to Africa.
"On the walls were various animals: gazelles and all sorts of exotic wild game, not just your average deer," Scott says.
Perhaps it's no surprise that a divorce lawyer was himself married multiple times. He was married to Lund for 13 years; the couple, who had a son and a daughter, divorced in 1976. In 1989, the attorney wed Toni Holt Kramer, but their marriage lasted less than three years.
In addition to his children with Lund, there's the matter of the paternity case brought in 1961 by former Miss USA Terry Huntingdon, who claimed Crowley had fathered a daughter by her that year. The widely covered legal matter -- it made newspapers throughout the country when Crowley called Huntingdon a "call girl" in court -- stretched on for several years during the 1960s. The matter was ultimately settled quietly, according to a 2005 story in the daily Los Angeles legal publication Metropolitan News-Enterprise. In his typical hard-charging nature, Crowley defended himself in the suit and even was able to compel testimony from Huntingdon's roommate about the beauty queen's allegedly concurrent sexual dalliances.
But there were cracks in the armor. In her 2000 autobiography "My Father's Daughter," Tina Sinatra wrote of a contentious estate-planning meeting she had with her father, his wife Barbara Sinatra and Crowley. When the singer admitted under questioning from his daughter that he wasn't sure he understood the meaning of some documents he'd signed, she exploded at the attorney.
"Turning to Arthur, I expressed my outrage and added, 'That's the dumbest toupee I've ever seen!' " she wrote. It was a barb Crowley would not forget. After Frank Sinatra died in 1998, a tearful Tina Sinatra, in the midst of funeral arrangements, at one point found herself being consoled by Crowley. But he took the opportunity to remind her of the day nearly a decade prior when she had insulted his hairpiece. Sinatra wrote: "'I didn't forget that,' Arthur said. 'That really hurt my feelings.'"
Despite that moment of vulnerability, colleagues say Crowley rarely let his guard down, projecting an image of total control. It is perhaps this aspect of Crowley's character that could explain his family's unwillingness to discuss him.
According to public records, one child, a son, is a resident at the Baroda house, which records show Crowley purchased in 1970 for about $250,000. The five-bedroom, roughly 9,000-square-foot modern residence, which was built in 1951 and includes a swimming pool and tennis court, is, by current standards, a teardown.
While it would appear that at least Crowley's one known son is behind the sale of the house, it's unclear if other siblings also stand to benefit from the potential windfall.
On a recent visit to Crowley's former estate on Baroda, there was little to be seen. The house is situated well inside the property, hidden behind a tall gate, gnarled trees and soaring cacti.
A press of the button on the driveway's metal call box summoned someone who cut the conversation short with a terse reply: "I just work here."
Crowley, whom legendary producer Robert Evans once called "the toughest Irishman attorney west of Chicago," practically invented one of the stock characters of the current tabloid world: the celebrity divorce lawyer.
Today, few things move newsstand sales and boost online traffic more than broken vows. But long before the likes of Hollywood superlawyer Laura Wasser regularly made headlines extricating Angelina Jolie, Christina Aguilera and Ryan Reynolds from failed marriages, Crowley -- whose death one year ago at the age of 85 drew strangely little notice -- was turning big-league divorces into can't-miss showbiz theater.
"He was, in his day, the most famous trial lawyer in Los Angeles," says prominent entertainment attorney Bert Fields.
Known for his outrageous legal gambits, Crowley won a $20 million settlement for Johnny Carson's third wife, $42 million for the first wife of then Los Angeles Lakers owner Jack Kent Cooke, dug up dirt on Steve McQueen, sued Howard Hughes and helped divvy up the Frank Sinatra estate.
Crowley learned to play rough with the powerful and famous by staring down all of Hollywood in the notorious Confidential magazine libel trial of 1957. Representing the publication -- the National Enquirer of its day -- in a case brought against it by the state of California, the attorney subpoenaed more than 100 stars including Elvis Presley and Clark Gable to testify whether stories about them were true. (Perhaps the most infamous was an article alleging that actress Maureen O'Hara all but had sex at the back of Grauman's Chinese Theater.)
It was said that as a result of Crowley's ploy, half the town hurried to vacation in Mexico. The attorney made such a name for himself with the case that when he was sued four years later in a paternity matter by a former Miss USA, the well-known ladies' man garnered headlines in the Los Angeles Times.
But when Crowley -- whom colleagues describe as a brilliant attorney but an often-distant co-worker -- passed away April 20, 2010, of unknown causes, the Los Angeles Times didn't memorialize him. In fact, Crowley slipped away without a single media outlet -- including the New York Times, which had spilled plenty of ink on his cases -- taking note of his five-decade-plus career. Indeed, only a 50-word paid obituary in the Los Angeles Times noted his death, describing Crowley, who ran his own namesake firm, as a "WWII vet, famed trial attorney and loving father," but offering little else.
The only tangible reminder of Crowley is his Holmby Hills mansion -- a three-acre spread near the estates of Paramount chief Brad Grey and acting couple Danny DeVito and Rhea Perlman -- which is on the market for $23 million. Attempts to contact Crowley's family through the real estate agent selling the property were unsuccessful, and phone calls to a handful of others believed to be related to Crowley went unanswered or unreturned.
It was a surprisingly quiet send-off for a Hollywood player who for years ruffled feathers in a town known for having a long memory. Former Crowley client Joanna Carson, third wife of the late talk-show king, is baffled by the lack of public notice. "It of course saddened me," she says. Like several other friends of the lawyer, she learned of his death by word-of-mouth. Imagine, for example, if there hadn't been obituaries penned for the equally colorful Johnnie Cochran.
Cochran, in his made-for-the-airwaves defense of O.J. Simpson, helped usher in the 24/7 TV news cycle. Crowley's career was likewise on the leading edge of a seismic shift in both the coverage of news and what's deemed newsworthy, changes that eventually would give rise to the likes of TMZ. The current preoccupation with Hollywood divorces and the endless war between stars and the tabloids were only nascent developments when Crowley came onto the scene in the 1950s. He soon helped put them front and center.
It's worth noting that while Crowley's family wouldn't give interviews for this report, he is best known for defending another publication's right to run what it considered news. Confidential, which debuted in 1952, was America's first no-holds-barred tabloid magazine. It broke ground with its reporting tactics: Sources were paid for information and required to sign affidavits vouching for it. The magazine was run by publisher Robert Harrison, who had cut his teeth in the 1940s putting out risque "girlie" magazines including Wink and Eyeful. He installed his niece, Marjorie Meade, as head of Hollywood Research Inc., Confidential's clandestine investigative bureau.
Although established media outlets panned the bimonthly Confidential for its loose journalism standards, it was an instant hit, at its peak outranking even Time in circulation. There were stories about leading men who beat their wives, leading ladies who were neglectful mothers and gay actors who kept secret their sexual orientation. One cataloged the female lovers Marlene Dietrich had taken, while another insinuated that Liberace had brazenly pursued a young male press agent.
The magazine's brash approach inevitably angered the studios. A handful of actors employed bulldog lawyer Jerry Geisler, who preceded Crowley as a leading Hollywood attorney, to sue the magazine for libel. By early 1957, the studios had pressured California Attorney General Pat Brown to act against Confidential. Brown, who would become governor two years later and was the father of the current governor, effectively banned the magazine in the state by threatening distributors with prosecution, according to "Shocking True Story," Henry E. Scott's 2010 book on the publication.
In May 1957, Brown went after the magazine more directly, indicting Harrison, Meade and several others associated with Confidential for conspiracy to commit criminal libel. The stakes were high: Harrison and his crew faced not only big fines but also jail time. Crowley, just 32, was hired to defend them.
When the trial began August 7, 1957, reporters from dozens of newspapers were in attendance, including a correspondent from Paris Match and four from London, according to Shocking True Story. (The Hollywood Reporter, apart from a few mentions in its Rambling Reporter gossip column, stayed away from writing about Confidential. Hy Hollinger, a former THR reporter who worked at Variety in the 1950s, says the trade publications "mainly ignored" Confidential because of a level of "decorum" that made it uncommon to go after other publications.)
Crowley came armed with an over-the-top plan: If the studios were going to claim the articles in the magazine weren't true, then the stars had better prove it. He tasked famed private eye Fred Otash with delivering more than 100 subpoenas. Many actors successfully avoided Otash, including Sinatra and Gregory Peck, who headed for Las Vegas.
"It looked like the exodus from Egypt," said Crowley in a 2003 interview with Vanity Fair.
But not everyone was so lucky: Actor Tab Hunter, then a 26-year-old closeted heartthrob, was subpoenaed and ordered to appear in court. Hunter had been the subject of a story whispering that he'd been at a pajama party staged "strictly for boys."
"I was scared to death," Hunter says today. He came out publicly in his 2005 autobiography, Tab Hunter Confidential. "You had to be under oath, and I don't lie."
Ultimately, Hunter wasn't called to testify, which would have undoubtedly ruined his career; Judge Herbert Walker ruled that only a limited number of Confidential stories were at issue. Some stars -- including Dorothy Dandridge, who denied an article about a lovers' tryst in the Lake Tahoe woods -- did take the stand, though they did so as witnesses for the prosecution. Still, Crowley's strategy seemed to have worked.
"He was very crafty," says Scott, who interviewed the attorney at the Baroda residence in 1996. "He emptied the town out, and what it did was the studios lobbied the prosecution and said, 'Maybe we should think about this. Maybe we should let up on these guys.'"
After a two-week deliberation, the jury was unable to render a verdict. Before a retrial could proceed, the studios and Harrison -- who, already saddled with a hefty legal bill, was not eager to face charges again -- worked out a deal by which Confidential would no longer "publish exposes of the private lives of movie stars," according to Shocking True Story. The magazine was irrevocably damaged. With the lack of ribald stories, circulation plunged, and Harrison sold the publication in 1958; it soldiered on until 1978. But the magazine lived on in the James Ellroy novel "L.A. Confidential" and its 1997 film adaptation, both of which fictionalized it as the tabloid Hush-Hush.
Crowley's success in keeping his clients out of prison raised his profile dramatically. It wasn't long before the politically conservative lawyer, a fastidious and fashionable dresser who enjoyed both big-game hunting and ballroom dancing, became a regular in the L.A. Times' society pages. In 1962, Crowley married actress Jana Lund, who gave Elvis his first onscreen kiss in the 1957 film "Loving You."
Nearly a year after the Confidential case, Crowley, representing Lana Turner's ex-husband Stephen Crane, helped clear his client's young daughter, Cheryl, in the stabbing death of Turner's boyfriend Johnny Stompanato, one of gangster Mickey Cohen's bodyguards. A month after the April 1958 ruling, Crowley again represented Crane, this time in a custody fight with Turner over their child. A string of high-profile cases followed, including suits that involved Oscar-winning actress Dorothy Malone, Vic Damone, Debbie Reynolds and Mel Torme.
In many of the cases, Crowley was on the side of the lesser celebrity, a role that -- like his position in the Confidential case -- essentially pitted him against the powers that be.
Subtlety wasn't Crowley's strong suit. Attorney Sorrell Trope, who attended law school with Crowley, recalls the day his longtime friend, who was prematurely bald, began wearing a toupee. Without prior announcement, Crowley made the switch in 1967 while in the midst of a trial. Says Trope: "The first two days of the trial, he comes in with his bald head, and the next day he comes in with this white toupee. The judge almost fell off the bench."
But Crowley's swagger served him well. That was certainly the case in the 1979 divorce of Cooke, the late Lakers and Washington Redskins owner, from Crowley's client, Barbara Jean Carnegie. The $42 million sum he extracted from Cooke, north of $100 million in today's dollars, was the largest divorce settlement at the time.
It wasn't the first time Crowley was playing in the biggest of big leagues. In 1963, he personally lodged a $12 million lawsuit against industrialist Hughes for allegedly wiretapping his telephone, though the case was dismissed in 1968. Crowley's connection to Hughes stemmed from the attorney's earlier representation of another lawyer who was trying to collect allegedly unpaid fees from the reclusive businessman.
Then there was Crowley's work in the early 1970s for producer Evans. In his 1994 memoir, "The Kid Stays in the Picture," he wrote of employing Crowley when he got into a skirmish with actor McQueen, who married Ali MacGraw after her divorce from Evans. McQueen wanted to adopt MacGraw and Evans' son; however, Crowley compiled an apparently damning "dossier almost a foot in height" on McQueen, which ended the actor's efforts.
In the 1985 Carson divorce, Crowley crafted another cagey approach -- but he might have gone too far. In addition to demanding a temporary monthly allowance of $220,000, Crowley argued that his client should be entitled to more than half of the couple's community property because of so-called celebrity goodwill. His reasoning centered on the notion that the talk-show host's brand was enhanced during the marriage, thus requiring additional compensation for Crowley's client.
According to Norman Oberstein, who represented Johnny Carson after he had dismissed another attorney, the judge ultimately authorized $35,000 a month in temporary support. And Crowley's argument for celebrity goodwill was rebuffed. "He certainly did all the right things; he was always a fierce adversary and very well-regarded, and it was a lot of fun to go against him," recalls Oberstein.
Crowley was paid handsomely for his efforts. According to James A. Albert's 1989 book "Pay Dirt: Divorces of the Rich and Famous," Crowley charged Joanna Carson $260 an hour and $520 an hour on Sundays. Several lawyers said Crowley's standard rate was quite high for the mid-1980s -- equivalent to $1,000 an hour or more today -- and none had ever heard of an attorney who billed a higher rate on Sundays.
Joanna Carson still walked away with a neat $20 million in cash and property. "I admired him greatly; if you had a problem about something, once you were friends, you could always call him," Carson says.
The attorney lived a lifestyle commensurate to his paychecks, attending black-tie charity galas; dining with the Club of the Vikings, an elite private dining group, at the since-shuttered hotspot Scandia restaurant; and throwing get-togethers with live music at the fully staffed Baroda house. The estate, it seems, had a personality that matched its owner. The living room was decorated with taxidermied trophy animals bagged during Crowley's hunting trips to Africa.
"On the walls were various animals: gazelles and all sorts of exotic wild game, not just your average deer," Scott says.
Perhaps it's no surprise that a divorce lawyer was himself married multiple times. He was married to Lund for 13 years; the couple, who had a son and a daughter, divorced in 1976. In 1989, the attorney wed Toni Holt Kramer, but their marriage lasted less than three years.
In addition to his children with Lund, there's the matter of the paternity case brought in 1961 by former Miss USA Terry Huntingdon, who claimed Crowley had fathered a daughter by her that year. The widely covered legal matter -- it made newspapers throughout the country when Crowley called Huntingdon a "call girl" in court -- stretched on for several years during the 1960s. The matter was ultimately settled quietly, according to a 2005 story in the daily Los Angeles legal publication Metropolitan News-Enterprise. In his typical hard-charging nature, Crowley defended himself in the suit and even was able to compel testimony from Huntingdon's roommate about the beauty queen's allegedly concurrent sexual dalliances.
But there were cracks in the armor. In her 2000 autobiography "My Father's Daughter," Tina Sinatra wrote of a contentious estate-planning meeting she had with her father, his wife Barbara Sinatra and Crowley. When the singer admitted under questioning from his daughter that he wasn't sure he understood the meaning of some documents he'd signed, she exploded at the attorney.
"Turning to Arthur, I expressed my outrage and added, 'That's the dumbest toupee I've ever seen!' " she wrote. It was a barb Crowley would not forget. After Frank Sinatra died in 1998, a tearful Tina Sinatra, in the midst of funeral arrangements, at one point found herself being consoled by Crowley. But he took the opportunity to remind her of the day nearly a decade prior when she had insulted his hairpiece. Sinatra wrote: "'I didn't forget that,' Arthur said. 'That really hurt my feelings.'"
Despite that moment of vulnerability, colleagues say Crowley rarely let his guard down, projecting an image of total control. It is perhaps this aspect of Crowley's character that could explain his family's unwillingness to discuss him.
According to public records, one child, a son, is a resident at the Baroda house, which records show Crowley purchased in 1970 for about $250,000. The five-bedroom, roughly 9,000-square-foot modern residence, which was built in 1951 and includes a swimming pool and tennis court, is, by current standards, a teardown.
While it would appear that at least Crowley's one known son is behind the sale of the house, it's unclear if other siblings also stand to benefit from the potential windfall.
On a recent visit to Crowley's former estate on Baroda, there was little to be seen. The house is situated well inside the property, hidden behind a tall gate, gnarled trees and soaring cacti.
A press of the button on the driveway's metal call box summoned someone who cut the conversation short with a terse reply: "I just work here."
Disney bringing Miss Marple to big screen
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – Agatha Christie's elderly detective Miss Marple is getting the big-screen treatment from Disney.
After months of negotiations, the studio has closed a deal to capture the movie rights to the character, who first appeared in print in 1927.
Disney is not making a period movie, however, but is looking do a contemporary version with an edge. It has commissioned a script from Mark Frost, who is best known for co-creating the landmark TV series "Twin Peaks" with David Lynch.
Jane Marple was one of Christie's most famous creations, a sweet old lady with a deep understanding of the dark side of human nature.
The character first appeared on screen in 1961 in "Murder, She Said," portrayed by Dame Margaret Rutherford, who was 70 at the time and went on to reprise the role in three other films with a comedic bent. Angela Lansbury played the character in 1980's "The Mirror Crack'd," based on a book that Christie had dedicated to Rutherford.
After months of negotiations, the studio has closed a deal to capture the movie rights to the character, who first appeared in print in 1927.
Disney is not making a period movie, however, but is looking do a contemporary version with an edge. It has commissioned a script from Mark Frost, who is best known for co-creating the landmark TV series "Twin Peaks" with David Lynch.
Jane Marple was one of Christie's most famous creations, a sweet old lady with a deep understanding of the dark side of human nature.
The character first appeared on screen in 1961 in "Murder, She Said," portrayed by Dame Margaret Rutherford, who was 70 at the time and went on to reprise the role in three other films with a comedic bent. Angela Lansbury played the character in 1980's "The Mirror Crack'd," based on a book that Christie had dedicated to Rutherford.
Helen Mirren makes impression in Hollywood
LOS ANGELES – Helen Mirren is still making an impression in Hollywood.
The Oscar winning actress sank her feet in wet cement outside Grauman's Chinese Theatre on Monday, joining a long list of celebrity hand and foot prints in the courtyard of the famed Hollywood tourist spot.
The ceremony comes less than two weeks before the release of her latest movie, "Arthur." She plays the nanny to the irresponsible billionaire played by Russell Brand.
Mirren won an Academy Award for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II in the 2006 film "The Queen."' She also got Oscar nominations for her roles in "The Madness of King George," "Gosford Park" and "The Last Station."
The Oscar winning actress sank her feet in wet cement outside Grauman's Chinese Theatre on Monday, joining a long list of celebrity hand and foot prints in the courtyard of the famed Hollywood tourist spot.
The ceremony comes less than two weeks before the release of her latest movie, "Arthur." She plays the nanny to the irresponsible billionaire played by Russell Brand.
Mirren won an Academy Award for her portrayal of Queen Elizabeth II in the 2006 film "The Queen."' She also got Oscar nominations for her roles in "The Madness of King George," "Gosford Park" and "The Last Station."
'Wimpy Kid' knocks out 'Sucker Punch' at box office
LOS ANGELES (AFP) – "Diary of a Wimpy Kid: Rodrick Rules," the second screen adaptation from the popular kids book series, earned $23.8 million at the weekend box office, industry data showed Monday.
The original film, "Diary of a Wimpy Kid," was released just last March, opening to $22.1 million and ultimately grossing $64 million in the United States.
Box office tracker Exhibitor Relations reported that second place went to "Sucker Punch," an action fantasy flick about a group of young vixens busting out of an insane asylum, which debuted at $19.1 million dollars.
Last week's box office winner "Limitless," a sci-fi film starring Bradley Cooper as an author who taps his brain's full potential after sampling a revolutionary new drug, fell to third with $15.1 million in sales.
Fourth place went to the Matthew McConaughey-starring drama "The Lincoln Lawyer" which grossed $10.8 million.
Paramount's eccentric animated film "Rango," with the voice talent of Johnny Depp in a tale about a chameleon who becomes sheriff to clean up the town of Dirt, was fifth with $9.8 million in ticket sales.
Science fiction romp "Paul" took in $7.9 million to make sixth place, followed by "Battle: Los Angeles" about a unit of alien-fighting US Marines, which made $7.6 million in tickets sold across North America.
The gothic fairytale retelling "Red Riding Hood," was eighth with $4.3 million in sales.
The ninth spot went "The Adjustment Bureau" with $4.3 million, while "Mars Needs Moms!" fell two places to take the number 10 spot, with $2.3 million.
The original film, "Diary of a Wimpy Kid," was released just last March, opening to $22.1 million and ultimately grossing $64 million in the United States.
Box office tracker Exhibitor Relations reported that second place went to "Sucker Punch," an action fantasy flick about a group of young vixens busting out of an insane asylum, which debuted at $19.1 million dollars.
Last week's box office winner "Limitless," a sci-fi film starring Bradley Cooper as an author who taps his brain's full potential after sampling a revolutionary new drug, fell to third with $15.1 million in sales.
Fourth place went to the Matthew McConaughey-starring drama "The Lincoln Lawyer" which grossed $10.8 million.
Paramount's eccentric animated film "Rango," with the voice talent of Johnny Depp in a tale about a chameleon who becomes sheriff to clean up the town of Dirt, was fifth with $9.8 million in ticket sales.
Science fiction romp "Paul" took in $7.9 million to make sixth place, followed by "Battle: Los Angeles" about a unit of alien-fighting US Marines, which made $7.6 million in tickets sold across North America.
The gothic fairytale retelling "Red Riding Hood," was eighth with $4.3 million in sales.
The ninth spot went "The Adjustment Bureau" with $4.3 million, while "Mars Needs Moms!" fell two places to take the number 10 spot, with $2.3 million.
Taylor's unpublished love letters up for auction
CONCORD, N.H. – Before becoming a bride eight times over, Elizabeth Taylor was a 17-year-old starlet scribbling letters to her first fiance, charting on pale pink stationery his progression from her one-and-only to the one who got away.
"I've never known this kind of love before — it's so perfect and complete — and mature," Taylor wrote to William Pawley on May 6, 1949. "I've never loved anyone in my life before one third as much as I love you — and I never will (well, as far as that goes — I'll never love anyone else — period)."
Taylor, who died last week at age 79, was engaged to Pawley in 1949, just before her first marriage. More than 60 of the letters she wrote him between March and October of that year will be auctioned in May by RR Auctions of Amherst, N.H. It bought the letters two years ago from Pawley, who lives in Florida.
The unpublished letters — some written in purple fountain ink on pink paper — provide a glimpse of a teenager's transition to adult screen star.
She frets about her weight ("As I'm sitting here — writing to you, I'm just stuffing myself on a box of candy — honestly I've got to stop eating so much") and passing her high school exams. And she contrasts two movies she was filming at the time, "A Place in the Sun" and "The Big Hangover," praising the director of the former and complaining about her role in the latter.
But mostly, she gushes about Pawley, the 22-year-old son of a former ambassador to Brazil, reassuring him over and over that her love is true.
"My heart aches & makes me want to cry when I think of you, and how much I want to be with and to look into your beautiful blue eyes, and kiss your sweet lips and have your strong arms hold me, oh so tight, & close to you ... I want us to be `lovers' always ... even after we've been married seventy-five years and have at least a dozen great-great-grandchildren," she wrote on March 28.
At the time, Taylor was publicly dating football player Glenn Davis, but in several of the letters, she complains about the ruse promoted by her mother and the studio to maintain her girl-next-door image. In a 10-page letter dated April 1, she describes her reaction to Davis accidentally breaking a pair of earrings Pawley had given her.
"I have never had such a strong desire to hit anyone with all my might in all my life," she wrote. "I gave him back his `A' pin, the football and his All-American sweater ... I don't care what they say anymore ... from now on I'm going to live my life the way I want to."
In May, she told Pawley she was ready to say goodbye to her career and everything connected with it, "For I won't be giving anything up — but I will be gaining the greatest gift that God bestows on man — love, marriage, a family — and you my Darling."
By September, however, Taylor was writing about returning her engagement ring at Pawley's request.
"I know with all my heart and soul that this is not the end for us — it couldn't be — we love each other too much," she wrote.
Less than eight months later, she married hotel heir Conrad Nicholson "Nicky" Hilton.
The online auction, set for May 19-26, will also feature letters Taylor's mother wrote to Pawley after the engagement ended, including one in which she wrote, "You have a nervous condition and a problem with jealousy, as such you and Elizabeth can never be together."
Bobby Livingston, spokesman for the auction house, said the letters were estimated to be worth $25,000 to $35,000 before Taylor's death, and he expects they could fetch two or three times that amount now.
"I've never known this kind of love before — it's so perfect and complete — and mature," Taylor wrote to William Pawley on May 6, 1949. "I've never loved anyone in my life before one third as much as I love you — and I never will (well, as far as that goes — I'll never love anyone else — period)."
Taylor, who died last week at age 79, was engaged to Pawley in 1949, just before her first marriage. More than 60 of the letters she wrote him between March and October of that year will be auctioned in May by RR Auctions of Amherst, N.H. It bought the letters two years ago from Pawley, who lives in Florida.
The unpublished letters — some written in purple fountain ink on pink paper — provide a glimpse of a teenager's transition to adult screen star.
She frets about her weight ("As I'm sitting here — writing to you, I'm just stuffing myself on a box of candy — honestly I've got to stop eating so much") and passing her high school exams. And she contrasts two movies she was filming at the time, "A Place in the Sun" and "The Big Hangover," praising the director of the former and complaining about her role in the latter.
But mostly, she gushes about Pawley, the 22-year-old son of a former ambassador to Brazil, reassuring him over and over that her love is true.
"My heart aches & makes me want to cry when I think of you, and how much I want to be with and to look into your beautiful blue eyes, and kiss your sweet lips and have your strong arms hold me, oh so tight, & close to you ... I want us to be `lovers' always ... even after we've been married seventy-five years and have at least a dozen great-great-grandchildren," she wrote on March 28.
At the time, Taylor was publicly dating football player Glenn Davis, but in several of the letters, she complains about the ruse promoted by her mother and the studio to maintain her girl-next-door image. In a 10-page letter dated April 1, she describes her reaction to Davis accidentally breaking a pair of earrings Pawley had given her.
"I have never had such a strong desire to hit anyone with all my might in all my life," she wrote. "I gave him back his `A' pin, the football and his All-American sweater ... I don't care what they say anymore ... from now on I'm going to live my life the way I want to."
In May, she told Pawley she was ready to say goodbye to her career and everything connected with it, "For I won't be giving anything up — but I will be gaining the greatest gift that God bestows on man — love, marriage, a family — and you my Darling."
By September, however, Taylor was writing about returning her engagement ring at Pawley's request.
"I know with all my heart and soul that this is not the end for us — it couldn't be — we love each other too much," she wrote.
Less than eight months later, she married hotel heir Conrad Nicholson "Nicky" Hilton.
The online auction, set for May 19-26, will also feature letters Taylor's mother wrote to Pawley after the engagement ended, including one in which she wrote, "You have a nervous condition and a problem with jealousy, as such you and Elizabeth can never be together."
Bobby Livingston, spokesman for the auction house, said the letters were estimated to be worth $25,000 to $35,000 before Taylor's death, and he expects they could fetch two or three times that amount now.
Monday, March 28, 2011
Arcade Fire, Justin Bieber win Canada music awards
TORONTO (Hollywood Reporter) – Fresh from their surprise win of the top prize at the Grammys last month, indie Montreal rockers Arcade Fire took home four prizes at Canada's Juno Awards in Toronto.
But the band didn't have the spotlight all to itself on Sunday: Justin Bieber took home his first-ever trophies. On the other hand, ceremony host Drake was snubbed despite leading the field with six nominations.
Arcade Fire won Junos for best group, best album and alternative album ("The Suburbs"), and best songwriter. The statuettes join its Grammy for album of the year.
Bieber, overlooked at the Grammys, predictably won the fan choice Juno award -- the only competition determined by ordinary fans -- and best pop album ("My World 2.0). The teen sensation, on tour in Europe, sent a video message of thanks.
"I want to thank the fans so much for being so supportive, buying my albums and voting for me... All right -- peace, Junos," he said.
Bieber was outshone by Neil Young in the best artist competition. Young also received a humanitarian award.
"I was 16 one time. He's fantastic. He's got some moves, doesn't he?" Young said of Bieber.
The Junos' 40th edition also saw Meaghan Smith named best new artist, while single of the year went to "Wavin' Flag," by K'Naan and the Young Artists for Haiti. Shania Twain was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame.
But the band didn't have the spotlight all to itself on Sunday: Justin Bieber took home his first-ever trophies. On the other hand, ceremony host Drake was snubbed despite leading the field with six nominations.
Arcade Fire won Junos for best group, best album and alternative album ("The Suburbs"), and best songwriter. The statuettes join its Grammy for album of the year.
Bieber, overlooked at the Grammys, predictably won the fan choice Juno award -- the only competition determined by ordinary fans -- and best pop album ("My World 2.0). The teen sensation, on tour in Europe, sent a video message of thanks.
"I want to thank the fans so much for being so supportive, buying my albums and voting for me... All right -- peace, Junos," he said.
Bieber was outshone by Neil Young in the best artist competition. Young also received a humanitarian award.
"I was 16 one time. He's fantastic. He's got some moves, doesn't he?" Young said of Bieber.
The Junos' 40th edition also saw Meaghan Smith named best new artist, while single of the year went to "Wavin' Flag," by K'Naan and the Young Artists for Haiti. Shania Twain was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame.
Britney is back, but can she compete with Gaga?
LONDON (Reuters) – As Britney Spears prepares to launch her seventh studio album "Femme Fatale" on Tuesday, the pop star faces keen competition from Lady Gaga, Katie Perry and Rihanna, who reign atop Billboard's Hot 100 singles ranking.
Her younger rivals' dominance this week may be coincidental -- indeed, Spears also topped the ranking recently with "Hold It Against Me." -- but the chart is a reminder of how crowded the pop diva market has become since Spears rose to fame as a teenager.
There is little doubt her fans will ensure brisk sales -- Spears has sold nearly 70 million albums, according to label Jive Record -- and her music is making headlines again instead of personal meltdowns, a custody battle and rehab stints.
Spears kicked off a string of promotions for the album on Friday with a performance at a Las Vegas nightclub. On Sunday in San Francisco she will record a sold-out mini-concert to be aired on ABC's "Good Morning America" TV show on Tuesday.
Yet after more than 10 years in the music business, Spears, now 29, may have to do more to remain relevant in the era of Gaga, critics say.
"As far as novelty goes, her natural demographic now has an icon as quirky and characterful as Lady Gaga to fascinate and fuss over," said Andy Gill of Britain's Independent newspaper.
"Gaga's music, let's be frank, is not that much better than, or even different to, that on 'Femme Fatale', but she knows the lingering appeal of playing dress up," he added in a two-out-of-five star review of Spears' record.
Adrian Thrills of the Daily Mail added: "The one-time gymslip diva has had to contend with the emergence of Lady Gaga, Katy Perry and Rihanna -- a brash new wave of female performers who have made their mark while seemingly exercising far more creative control."
REVIEWS RANGE WIDELY
Reviews of "Femme Fatale" have been mixed.
Among the most positive was Rolling Stone Magazine, which awarded the album four stars. "Femme Fatale may be Britney's best album," wrote Jody Rosen, describing it as "a party record packed with sex and sadness."
Hitmaking producers Dr. Luke and Max Martin were responsible for seven of the 12 tracks, while the Black Eyed Peas' will.i.am was behind "Big Fat Bass" and Sweden's Bloodshy worked on "How I Roll" and "Trip To Your Heart."
Critics singled out "Hold It Against Me", with its dubstep influence, and "Inside Out," as well as "Till the World Ends," which Spin magazine called Spears' "first truly synapse-sizzling single since (2004's) 'Toxic.'"
While there was broad agreement that the electro-pop, ballad-light record would be a dance floor hit, critics felt Spears was in danger of disappearing as a voice and personality.
Alexis Petridis of Britain's Guardian newspaper awarded the album three stars, giving much credit to the producers for creating music that was "genuinely exciting."
But he reflected negatively on Britney's voice, saying it was "as anonymous as ever, a state of affairs amplified by the lavishing of Auto-Tune."
Spears' has said little about the album that has been two years in the making, although she has called "Femme Fatale," "my best work yet" on a recent radio appearance and stressed its dance roots.
"It's definitely something that you want to work out to," Spears said. "I'm a dancer so it's definitely something I can work with. It's just really fun."
Her younger rivals' dominance this week may be coincidental -- indeed, Spears also topped the ranking recently with "Hold It Against Me." -- but the chart is a reminder of how crowded the pop diva market has become since Spears rose to fame as a teenager.
There is little doubt her fans will ensure brisk sales -- Spears has sold nearly 70 million albums, according to label Jive Record -- and her music is making headlines again instead of personal meltdowns, a custody battle and rehab stints.
Spears kicked off a string of promotions for the album on Friday with a performance at a Las Vegas nightclub. On Sunday in San Francisco she will record a sold-out mini-concert to be aired on ABC's "Good Morning America" TV show on Tuesday.
Yet after more than 10 years in the music business, Spears, now 29, may have to do more to remain relevant in the era of Gaga, critics say.
"As far as novelty goes, her natural demographic now has an icon as quirky and characterful as Lady Gaga to fascinate and fuss over," said Andy Gill of Britain's Independent newspaper.
"Gaga's music, let's be frank, is not that much better than, or even different to, that on 'Femme Fatale', but she knows the lingering appeal of playing dress up," he added in a two-out-of-five star review of Spears' record.
Adrian Thrills of the Daily Mail added: "The one-time gymslip diva has had to contend with the emergence of Lady Gaga, Katy Perry and Rihanna -- a brash new wave of female performers who have made their mark while seemingly exercising far more creative control."
REVIEWS RANGE WIDELY
Reviews of "Femme Fatale" have been mixed.
Among the most positive was Rolling Stone Magazine, which awarded the album four stars. "Femme Fatale may be Britney's best album," wrote Jody Rosen, describing it as "a party record packed with sex and sadness."
Hitmaking producers Dr. Luke and Max Martin were responsible for seven of the 12 tracks, while the Black Eyed Peas' will.i.am was behind "Big Fat Bass" and Sweden's Bloodshy worked on "How I Roll" and "Trip To Your Heart."
Critics singled out "Hold It Against Me", with its dubstep influence, and "Inside Out," as well as "Till the World Ends," which Spin magazine called Spears' "first truly synapse-sizzling single since (2004's) 'Toxic.'"
While there was broad agreement that the electro-pop, ballad-light record would be a dance floor hit, critics felt Spears was in danger of disappearing as a voice and personality.
Alexis Petridis of Britain's Guardian newspaper awarded the album three stars, giving much credit to the producers for creating music that was "genuinely exciting."
But he reflected negatively on Britney's voice, saying it was "as anonymous as ever, a state of affairs amplified by the lavishing of Auto-Tune."
Spears' has said little about the album that has been two years in the making, although she has called "Femme Fatale," "my best work yet" on a recent radio appearance and stressed its dance roots.
"It's definitely something that you want to work out to," Spears said. "I'm a dancer so it's definitely something I can work with. It's just really fun."
Warner Bros to rent 5 more movies on Facebook
(Reuters) – U.S. film studio Warner Brothers said it would offer five additional movies for rent on social networking website Facebook, a further sign of intensifying competition in renting out movies on the Internet.
Warner Bros, a unit of Time Warner Inc, said the films on offer would be "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone," "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets," "Inception," "Life as We Know It" and "Yogi Bear."
Earlier this month, Warner Bros said it would make some of its movies available on Facebook, where consumers can pay the rent using Facebook Credits, a virtual currency so far used mainly in social games on the site.
Warner Bros, a unit of Time Warner Inc, said the films on offer would be "Harry Potter and the Sorcerer's Stone," "Harry Potter and the Chamber of Secrets," "Inception," "Life as We Know It" and "Yogi Bear."
Earlier this month, Warner Bros said it would make some of its movies available on Facebook, where consumers can pay the rent using Facebook Credits, a virtual currency so far used mainly in social games on the site.
Real-life football story fumbles the ball
LOS ANGELES (Hollywood Reporter) – In "The 5th Quarter," the filmmakers' hearts are in the right place but the execution couldn't be more wrong-headed.
At every crucial juncture, writer-producer-director Rick Bieber turns a potentially affecting true-life story into an overly emotional yet under-dramatized account of a family facing the death of a young son. Significantly, he never makes up his mind whether he wants to make a cogent narrative about life and death -- or an infomercial.
As such, the film is an uncomfortable fit in multiplexes. The small screen is more tolerant of films determined to be "inspirational" yet lacking the tools to achieve that goal. It opened in theaters on Friday, earning a weekend haul of just $219,000 from 123 outlets.
The story revolves around a tragic car accident in February 2006 that claimed the life of 15-year-old Luke Abbate of Marietta, Ga. While his death tore the family apart, his older brother Jon (Ryan Merriman), a superb linebacker on Wake Forest University's football team, dedicated the following season to Luke, even switching his uniform number to No. 5 in honor of his brother's high-school jersey.
Motivated by Jon Abbate's insistence he was "playing for two," the normally lackluster Wake Forest team turned in its best season in school history. The Abbate family went on to form the Luke Abbate Fifth Quarter Foundation to raise awareness about reckless teenage driving and the life-saving gift of organ donation.
Faced with a naturally structured story that resonates with issues about family, mortality and the challenge of adversity, Bieber opts instead for a series of "plugs" that may or may not reflect how the film got funded.
Throwing the entire narrative out of whack, the first half hour of a 97-minute film dwells on the details of Luke's death so the film can lecture on teen reckless driving and produce many scenes involving organ donation, even dragging in an unrelated character in another part of the country, who will eventually receive Luke's heart.
The plugs continue as Jon shrugs off depression and drinking to train intensely at Steve Uria's Eclipse studio in Atlanta, with Uria playing himself and the brand Eclipse in nearly every scene. The biggest plug is reserved for Wake Forest itself, the team and the institution, which you're told many times is a "special place," a sentiment no doubt shared by the alum and booster who came aboard as the film's exec producer.
None of this would matter that much had Bieber not allowed the plugs to throw his narrative out of joint. But hospital scenes, then funeral and lengthy testimonials mean little to an audience that doesn't know the deceased. A few early scenes involving Luke (Stefan Guy) are too fleeting make any impression. Much worse though is the portrayal of his family.
Introducing characters under extreme emotional stress does nobody any favors. While Aidan Quinn (as the father), Andie MacDowell (as the mother) and Merriman are veteran actors, their overwrought scenes make their characters come off as a family of hotheads, screaming at police, doctors and nurses, chewing out a neighbor or causing a drunken scene in a restaurant.
Somewhere in all this the real story got completely lost, that being (one would think) how a young man confronts his brother's death and turns it into a challenge to better himself and in so doing motivated an entire team. A football TV commentator at one point declares Jon Abbate is the "spiritual leader" of his team. But you never see this. Rather he and his teammates sit around over pizza and beer talking about how "inspirational" he is, a scene with artless dialogue you cannot imagine being uttered in real life.
Bieber's maudlin script must use that word or some variation a dozen times along with rah-rah talks from coaches and other sports cliches that play like Saturday Night Live skits. (One about Eskimos and Texans will induce either winces or sustained titters.)
Then there are those missing key scenes. The parents apparently have a falling out in the year following their son's death but none of this occurs on camera. Bieber would rather show them in the stands, jumping up and down every time Wake Forest scores. Another son wavers about going to law school but this subplot is dropped completely.
Relationships between Jon and his girlfriend (Jullian Batherson) or between him and his teammates go largely unexplored. Meanwhile, other characters hang around the periphery without ever playing significant roles.
While the film takes advantage of locations in Winston-Salem, N.C., and in and around the university and its football stadium, the football footage looks like highlight films on the nightly news. Mostly, a few staged scenes with the actors on the field or in the stands get mix in game footage from the 2006 championship season. You want to throw a penalty flag -- early and often.
Opens: March 25 (Rocky Mountain Pictures) Rocky Mountain Pictures/Angel City Pictures Cast: Aidan Quinn, Andie MacDowell, Ryan Meriman, Michael Harding, Stacy Earl, Matt D. McGrath, Stefan Guy Director-screenwriter-producer: Rick Bieber Executive producers: Alan Cohen, Bob J. McCreary Director of photography: Craig Haagansen Production designer: Sophia Madalana Martinez Moore Music: Andy Mendelson Costume designer: Deborah Latham Editor: Mark Conte Rated PG-13, 97 minutes
At every crucial juncture, writer-producer-director Rick Bieber turns a potentially affecting true-life story into an overly emotional yet under-dramatized account of a family facing the death of a young son. Significantly, he never makes up his mind whether he wants to make a cogent narrative about life and death -- or an infomercial.
As such, the film is an uncomfortable fit in multiplexes. The small screen is more tolerant of films determined to be "inspirational" yet lacking the tools to achieve that goal. It opened in theaters on Friday, earning a weekend haul of just $219,000 from 123 outlets.
The story revolves around a tragic car accident in February 2006 that claimed the life of 15-year-old Luke Abbate of Marietta, Ga. While his death tore the family apart, his older brother Jon (Ryan Merriman), a superb linebacker on Wake Forest University's football team, dedicated the following season to Luke, even switching his uniform number to No. 5 in honor of his brother's high-school jersey.
Motivated by Jon Abbate's insistence he was "playing for two," the normally lackluster Wake Forest team turned in its best season in school history. The Abbate family went on to form the Luke Abbate Fifth Quarter Foundation to raise awareness about reckless teenage driving and the life-saving gift of organ donation.
Faced with a naturally structured story that resonates with issues about family, mortality and the challenge of adversity, Bieber opts instead for a series of "plugs" that may or may not reflect how the film got funded.
Throwing the entire narrative out of whack, the first half hour of a 97-minute film dwells on the details of Luke's death so the film can lecture on teen reckless driving and produce many scenes involving organ donation, even dragging in an unrelated character in another part of the country, who will eventually receive Luke's heart.
The plugs continue as Jon shrugs off depression and drinking to train intensely at Steve Uria's Eclipse studio in Atlanta, with Uria playing himself and the brand Eclipse in nearly every scene. The biggest plug is reserved for Wake Forest itself, the team and the institution, which you're told many times is a "special place," a sentiment no doubt shared by the alum and booster who came aboard as the film's exec producer.
None of this would matter that much had Bieber not allowed the plugs to throw his narrative out of joint. But hospital scenes, then funeral and lengthy testimonials mean little to an audience that doesn't know the deceased. A few early scenes involving Luke (Stefan Guy) are too fleeting make any impression. Much worse though is the portrayal of his family.
Introducing characters under extreme emotional stress does nobody any favors. While Aidan Quinn (as the father), Andie MacDowell (as the mother) and Merriman are veteran actors, their overwrought scenes make their characters come off as a family of hotheads, screaming at police, doctors and nurses, chewing out a neighbor or causing a drunken scene in a restaurant.
Somewhere in all this the real story got completely lost, that being (one would think) how a young man confronts his brother's death and turns it into a challenge to better himself and in so doing motivated an entire team. A football TV commentator at one point declares Jon Abbate is the "spiritual leader" of his team. But you never see this. Rather he and his teammates sit around over pizza and beer talking about how "inspirational" he is, a scene with artless dialogue you cannot imagine being uttered in real life.
Bieber's maudlin script must use that word or some variation a dozen times along with rah-rah talks from coaches and other sports cliches that play like Saturday Night Live skits. (One about Eskimos and Texans will induce either winces or sustained titters.)
Then there are those missing key scenes. The parents apparently have a falling out in the year following their son's death but none of this occurs on camera. Bieber would rather show them in the stands, jumping up and down every time Wake Forest scores. Another son wavers about going to law school but this subplot is dropped completely.
Relationships between Jon and his girlfriend (Jullian Batherson) or between him and his teammates go largely unexplored. Meanwhile, other characters hang around the periphery without ever playing significant roles.
While the film takes advantage of locations in Winston-Salem, N.C., and in and around the university and its football stadium, the football footage looks like highlight films on the nightly news. Mostly, a few staged scenes with the actors on the field or in the stands get mix in game footage from the 2006 championship season. You want to throw a penalty flag -- early and often.
Opens: March 25 (Rocky Mountain Pictures) Rocky Mountain Pictures/Angel City Pictures Cast: Aidan Quinn, Andie MacDowell, Ryan Meriman, Michael Harding, Stacy Earl, Matt D. McGrath, Stefan Guy Director-screenwriter-producer: Rick Bieber Executive producers: Alan Cohen, Bob J. McCreary Director of photography: Craig Haagansen Production designer: Sophia Madalana Martinez Moore Music: Andy Mendelson Costume designer: Deborah Latham Editor: Mark Conte Rated PG-13, 97 minutes
Arcade Fire win best album at Canada's Junos
TORONTO – Canadian indie band Arcade Fire followed their huge victories at the Grammys and Brit awards by capturing four Juno awards including album of the year for "The Suburbs" and group of the year at the Canadian music awards ceremony Sunday night.
After the rockers' surprise Grammy for best album of the year and Brit award win for best international album, it would have been shocking if the critic darlings didn't snag a Juno for the success of their album in the country they call home and where they initially built their fan base.
"We're truly overwhelmed," said the band's gangly multi-instrumentalist, Richard Reed Parry in Toronto's Air Canada Center where the Junos were held. "Thank you everybody. Thank you to Montreal, our home where we all live, and thanks to Toronto."
"Toronto is one of the first places we had, like, really exciting shows and felt like something crazy might be about to happen. And something did. So thanks for being there with us."
The rock outfit also won best alternative album of the year and songwriter of the year, leaving them short of just one win out of their five nominations.
"The Suburbs" beat out pint-sized pop star Justin Bieber's "My World 2.0," Drake's "Thank Me Later," Hedley's "The Show Must Go On," and "A Place Called Love."
But the side-swept coifed Bieber did not go home empty-handed. The 17-year-old teen-pop titan won the first two Juno awards of his career for pop album of the year and the Juno fan choice award.
Unfortunately for millions of his tween devotees watching the televised show, the platinum-selling, pop crooner from Ontario couldn't appear in person to collect his trophies due to a scheduling demand overseas.
"I want to thank everybody so much for believing in me," said Bieber, via a video message. "Most of all, I want to thank my mom for raising me in Canada."
But the news wasn't as good for 24-year-old rapper and Juno host Drake, who entered the weekend with a leading six nominations, but wound up heading home empty-handed. In a surprise win, Canadian hip-hop artist Shad took the prize for best rap recording of the year for his album "TSOL," beating out internationally renowned Drake.
"Wow. I'm very surprised. This is like the Emmy going to Theo's friend Cockroach or something," said Shad, making a funny "Cosby Show" reference.
The Junos, which celebrated its 40th anniversary, gave a significant shout out to veteran artist Neil Young, 65, who claimed the prize for artist of the year, adult alternative album of the year for "Le Noise" and a humanitarian award. Young won his first Grammy this year for his music for best rock song for "An Angry World."
"It's just totally incomprehensible that I'm here. But it's a great honor. Thank you very much everybody. I really appreciate it. O Canada!" said the rock legend in reference the country's national anthem.
Beloved country-pop singer Shania Twain, 45, also received a significant pat on the back as she was ushered into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame with an introduction speech from Bryan Adams, who called Twain a "Canadian treasure," and video testimonials from Taylor Swift and Anne Murray.
"Thank you so much," said the singer, clad in a sparkling sleeveless gown. "I really am turning into such a sap. But this is just a very beautiful moment for me. I'm really so proud of Canada's talent."
After the rockers' surprise Grammy for best album of the year and Brit award win for best international album, it would have been shocking if the critic darlings didn't snag a Juno for the success of their album in the country they call home and where they initially built their fan base.
"We're truly overwhelmed," said the band's gangly multi-instrumentalist, Richard Reed Parry in Toronto's Air Canada Center where the Junos were held. "Thank you everybody. Thank you to Montreal, our home where we all live, and thanks to Toronto."
"Toronto is one of the first places we had, like, really exciting shows and felt like something crazy might be about to happen. And something did. So thanks for being there with us."
The rock outfit also won best alternative album of the year and songwriter of the year, leaving them short of just one win out of their five nominations.
"The Suburbs" beat out pint-sized pop star Justin Bieber's "My World 2.0," Drake's "Thank Me Later," Hedley's "The Show Must Go On," and "A Place Called Love."
But the side-swept coifed Bieber did not go home empty-handed. The 17-year-old teen-pop titan won the first two Juno awards of his career for pop album of the year and the Juno fan choice award.
Unfortunately for millions of his tween devotees watching the televised show, the platinum-selling, pop crooner from Ontario couldn't appear in person to collect his trophies due to a scheduling demand overseas.
"I want to thank everybody so much for believing in me," said Bieber, via a video message. "Most of all, I want to thank my mom for raising me in Canada."
But the news wasn't as good for 24-year-old rapper and Juno host Drake, who entered the weekend with a leading six nominations, but wound up heading home empty-handed. In a surprise win, Canadian hip-hop artist Shad took the prize for best rap recording of the year for his album "TSOL," beating out internationally renowned Drake.
"Wow. I'm very surprised. This is like the Emmy going to Theo's friend Cockroach or something," said Shad, making a funny "Cosby Show" reference.
The Junos, which celebrated its 40th anniversary, gave a significant shout out to veteran artist Neil Young, 65, who claimed the prize for artist of the year, adult alternative album of the year for "Le Noise" and a humanitarian award. Young won his first Grammy this year for his music for best rock song for "An Angry World."
"It's just totally incomprehensible that I'm here. But it's a great honor. Thank you very much everybody. I really appreciate it. O Canada!" said the rock legend in reference the country's national anthem.
Beloved country-pop singer Shania Twain, 45, also received a significant pat on the back as she was ushered into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame with an introduction speech from Bryan Adams, who called Twain a "Canadian treasure," and video testimonials from Taylor Swift and Anne Murray.
"Thank you so much," said the singer, clad in a sparkling sleeveless gown. "I really am turning into such a sap. But this is just a very beautiful moment for me. I'm really so proud of Canada's talent."
Foo Fighters documentary a plug for new album
AUSTIN, Texas (Hollywood Reporter) – A standard-issue rockumentary culminating in an extended promo for the subjects' new album, "Foo Fighters: Back and Forth" offers a clean chronology but only meager revelations for the die-hard fans who will turn out for a one-day theatrical release (to be paired with a 3D concert broadcast) on April 5.
More casual followers who stumble across it on VH1 (April 8) may appreciate its clean, no-pretense approach: Speaking only to current and past band members (and to the studio star, Butch Vig, who has sometimes lent them his talents) director James Moll combines friendly talking-heads footage with ample vintage performance clips and stills to connect the dots.
Starting as it should, with an efficient summary of the success Nevermind brought Nirvana and how Kurt Cobain's suicide in 1994 ended that run, the doc not only conjures the "what now?" crisis faced by drummer Dave Grohl, but points out that all the other musicians he would soon recruit for his new band came from bands whose careers ended prematurely -- former Germs guitarist and Nirvana touring member Pat Smear; Sunny Day Real Estate refugees William Goldsmith and Nate Mendel.
As it winds through the surprisingly quick success Grohl's Foo Fighters enjoyed, the movie is almost distractingly polite about the roster changes the band has endured since its debut. The most interesting things get is when drummer Goldsmith is edged out of the group by Grohl, who sings and plays guitar for Foo Fighters, but was still enough of a rhythm-section man to feel, as he recalls here, "I know what the drums should sound like." Grohl re-recorded all the drum parts covertly after the initial sessions for 1997's "The Color and the Shape," and soon Goldsmith was an ex-Fighter.
Whatever ego clashes happened at the time, both men (and others who have come and gone) keep an even keel onscreen. While the absence of bitterness or soul-searching may be good for their mental health, it gets a little stale for viewers after an hour and a half.
The staleness factor is hardly helped by a long section about the now-megagroup's booking at Wembley Stadium in 2008, or by the disproportionate amount of screen time devoted to the recording of this year's "Wasting Light." The record's stripped-down, family-friendly production (recorded to tape, not digital, in the singer's retrofitted garage) may invite happy home-movie clips of backyard cookouts and pool parties, but its musical-insight factor is awfully low.
More casual followers who stumble across it on VH1 (April 8) may appreciate its clean, no-pretense approach: Speaking only to current and past band members (and to the studio star, Butch Vig, who has sometimes lent them his talents) director James Moll combines friendly talking-heads footage with ample vintage performance clips and stills to connect the dots.
Starting as it should, with an efficient summary of the success Nevermind brought Nirvana and how Kurt Cobain's suicide in 1994 ended that run, the doc not only conjures the "what now?" crisis faced by drummer Dave Grohl, but points out that all the other musicians he would soon recruit for his new band came from bands whose careers ended prematurely -- former Germs guitarist and Nirvana touring member Pat Smear; Sunny Day Real Estate refugees William Goldsmith and Nate Mendel.
As it winds through the surprisingly quick success Grohl's Foo Fighters enjoyed, the movie is almost distractingly polite about the roster changes the band has endured since its debut. The most interesting things get is when drummer Goldsmith is edged out of the group by Grohl, who sings and plays guitar for Foo Fighters, but was still enough of a rhythm-section man to feel, as he recalls here, "I know what the drums should sound like." Grohl re-recorded all the drum parts covertly after the initial sessions for 1997's "The Color and the Shape," and soon Goldsmith was an ex-Fighter.
Whatever ego clashes happened at the time, both men (and others who have come and gone) keep an even keel onscreen. While the absence of bitterness or soul-searching may be good for their mental health, it gets a little stale for viewers after an hour and a half.
The staleness factor is hardly helped by a long section about the now-megagroup's booking at Wembley Stadium in 2008, or by the disproportionate amount of screen time devoted to the recording of this year's "Wasting Light." The record's stripped-down, family-friendly production (recorded to tape, not digital, in the singer's retrofitted garage) may invite happy home-movie clips of backyard cookouts and pool parties, but its musical-insight factor is awfully low.
TV, radio personality DJ Megatron killed in NYC
NEW YORK – Urban radio and TV personality DJ Megatron, who built a career at hip-hop and R&B radio stations from Philadelphia to Boston and told viewers of a popular music TV show "What's Good," was shot to death early Sunday, his manager and police said.
The occasional BET television segment host was killed while heading to a store near his home on New York City's Staten Island around 2 a.m., said his manager Justin Kirkland, known as J. Smoove.
The 32-year-old deejay, born Corey McGriff, was found dead with a gunshot wound to his chest, police said. No arrests had been made.
His manager said friends and relatives had no idea why anyone might have attacked a deejay known for his upbeat, amiable attitude.
"He probably had one of the best personalities around . super-positive, happy all the time," Kirkland said.
Rising to the on-air ranks after starting as an intern, DJ Megatron began his career at New York's WKRS-FM, better known as Kiss FM, where deejays remembered him on the air and online Sunday.
He also worked at what was then Boston's Hot 97.7, or WBOT-FM, and at Philadelphia's The Beat, or WPHI-FM, according to a bio on his MySpace site.
In recent years, he worked on BET's "106 & Park" music countdown series, mainly in a role interacting with its live audience, the Viacom Inc.-owned network said. But he also did some on-camera work for the show and BET's website, including "What's Good" spots that took him onto the streets to ask bystanders about topics ranging from sports to "The Five Elements of Hip-Hop."
"He will truly be missed," the network said in a statement extending condolences to his family.
The deejay, sometimes known as Mega or Mega McGriff, also appeared in movies including 2005's "State Property 2," starring Roc-A-Fella Records co-founder Damon Dash and rappers Beanie Sigel and N.O.R.E., formerly Noreaga.
A father of three, DJ Megatron also devoted time to charitable events on Staten Island, his manager said.
The occasional BET television segment host was killed while heading to a store near his home on New York City's Staten Island around 2 a.m., said his manager Justin Kirkland, known as J. Smoove.
The 32-year-old deejay, born Corey McGriff, was found dead with a gunshot wound to his chest, police said. No arrests had been made.
His manager said friends and relatives had no idea why anyone might have attacked a deejay known for his upbeat, amiable attitude.
"He probably had one of the best personalities around . super-positive, happy all the time," Kirkland said.
Rising to the on-air ranks after starting as an intern, DJ Megatron began his career at New York's WKRS-FM, better known as Kiss FM, where deejays remembered him on the air and online Sunday.
He also worked at what was then Boston's Hot 97.7, or WBOT-FM, and at Philadelphia's The Beat, or WPHI-FM, according to a bio on his MySpace site.
In recent years, he worked on BET's "106 & Park" music countdown series, mainly in a role interacting with its live audience, the Viacom Inc.-owned network said. But he also did some on-camera work for the show and BET's website, including "What's Good" spots that took him onto the streets to ask bystanders about topics ranging from sports to "The Five Elements of Hip-Hop."
"He will truly be missed," the network said in a statement extending condolences to his family.
The deejay, sometimes known as Mega or Mega McGriff, also appeared in movies including 2005's "State Property 2," starring Roc-A-Fella Records co-founder Damon Dash and rappers Beanie Sigel and N.O.R.E., formerly Noreaga.
A father of three, DJ Megatron also devoted time to charitable events on Staten Island, his manager said.
Sunday, March 27, 2011
Snoop Dogg, Warren G attend service for Nate Dogg
LONG BEACH, Calif. – Rappers Snoop Dogg, Warren G and The Game joined family, friends and about 1,000 fans of Nate Dogg to remember the hip-hop singer, who died this month of complications from multiple strokes.
The family of Nate Dogg — whose real name was Nathaniel Dwayne Hale — decided that the ceremony at the Queen Mary Dome would not be open to the public as they previously wanted, but they made 1,000 tickets and shuttles available to fans.
The dome in Hale's hometown of Long Beach is adjacent to the historic ship the Queen Mary and was the former home of Howard Hughes' airplane folly, the Spruce Goose.
Organizers had sought a more central location for the funeral, but none proved large enough for the numbers of expected mourners. A private dinner was planned after the service.
Hale started out singing in church choirs, then formed a group with Snoop Dogg and Warren G while the trio was in high school in Long Beach.
His almost monotone vocal stylings anchored some of rap's most seminal songs and helped define the sound of West Coast hip-hop on tracks usually produced by Dr. Dre and performed by rappers like Snoop Dogg, Tha Dogg Pound and Warren G. He remained sought after as a singer more than a decade after his original success, supplying vocals to more recent tracks by 50 Cent and Ludacris.
Hale dropped out of high school, was dishonorably discharged from the Marines and dabbled in the drug trade before finding success as Nate Dogg on Dr. Dre's classic 1992 album "The Chronic."
Late in life, he was plagued by legal and health problems, including at least two strokes in 2008.
The family of Nate Dogg — whose real name was Nathaniel Dwayne Hale — decided that the ceremony at the Queen Mary Dome would not be open to the public as they previously wanted, but they made 1,000 tickets and shuttles available to fans.
The dome in Hale's hometown of Long Beach is adjacent to the historic ship the Queen Mary and was the former home of Howard Hughes' airplane folly, the Spruce Goose.
Organizers had sought a more central location for the funeral, but none proved large enough for the numbers of expected mourners. A private dinner was planned after the service.
Hale started out singing in church choirs, then formed a group with Snoop Dogg and Warren G while the trio was in high school in Long Beach.
His almost monotone vocal stylings anchored some of rap's most seminal songs and helped define the sound of West Coast hip-hop on tracks usually produced by Dr. Dre and performed by rappers like Snoop Dogg, Tha Dogg Pound and Warren G. He remained sought after as a singer more than a decade after his original success, supplying vocals to more recent tracks by 50 Cent and Ludacris.
Hale dropped out of high school, was dishonorably discharged from the Marines and dabbled in the drug trade before finding success as Nate Dogg on Dr. Dre's classic 1992 album "The Chronic."
Late in life, he was plagued by legal and health problems, including at least two strokes in 2008.
Franklin dances, sings at 69th birthday party
NEW YORK – Aretha Franklin proved her voice is still divine at 69 as she gave a brief but rousing performance at a swank birthday party in her honor.
Tony Bennett, Smokey Robinson, music mogul Clive Davis, Bette Midler and Gayle King were among the celebrities on hand to pay tribute to the Queen of Soul on Friday night at a late-night birthday party at a Central Park Hotel.
"It's a fabulous moment," said Franklin, showing off her noticeably thinner frame in a flowing white and gold gown as she sat at a table with several gifts.
Bennett, who called Franklin "one of a kind" was one of those who came with a present — and his was unique.
"I also paint, so she knows about that," he said. "A long time ago, she said, 'I'd love to have you do a painting of me,' and I remembered that, and when I heard I was coming here, I just knocked off a quick sketch tonight and gave it to her tonight."
More than 100 friends and family gathered to celebrate Franklin, who just a few months ago underwent surgery for an ailment she has declined to disclose. In recent weeks, she's made more public appearances and is set to resume her stage performances in May. At the party, Franklin seemed full of energy, greeting guests and dancing to the music.
Franklin wasn't billed as the evening's entertainment. Instead, she had other acclaimed musicians on hand to perform for her: jazz musician Roy Ayers, singer Nnenna Freelon, and Tito Puente Jr. all gave mini-concerts at the soiree.
But after former Temptations frontman Dennis Edwards serenaded her with a couple of riveting songs, she joined him and they both sang "The Way We Were."
Afterward, Edwards and the crowd sang "Happy Birthday" to Franklin, and she cut her birthday cake.
The Detroit native planned to stay in New York for at least a day more, but don't expect much more celebrating for Franklin.
"I will be in a horizontal position tomorrow, all day!" she said.
Tony Bennett, Smokey Robinson, music mogul Clive Davis, Bette Midler and Gayle King were among the celebrities on hand to pay tribute to the Queen of Soul on Friday night at a late-night birthday party at a Central Park Hotel.
"It's a fabulous moment," said Franklin, showing off her noticeably thinner frame in a flowing white and gold gown as she sat at a table with several gifts.
Bennett, who called Franklin "one of a kind" was one of those who came with a present — and his was unique.
"I also paint, so she knows about that," he said. "A long time ago, she said, 'I'd love to have you do a painting of me,' and I remembered that, and when I heard I was coming here, I just knocked off a quick sketch tonight and gave it to her tonight."
More than 100 friends and family gathered to celebrate Franklin, who just a few months ago underwent surgery for an ailment she has declined to disclose. In recent weeks, she's made more public appearances and is set to resume her stage performances in May. At the party, Franklin seemed full of energy, greeting guests and dancing to the music.
Franklin wasn't billed as the evening's entertainment. Instead, she had other acclaimed musicians on hand to perform for her: jazz musician Roy Ayers, singer Nnenna Freelon, and Tito Puente Jr. all gave mini-concerts at the soiree.
But after former Temptations frontman Dennis Edwards serenaded her with a couple of riveting songs, she joined him and they both sang "The Way We Were."
Afterward, Edwards and the crowd sang "Happy Birthday" to Franklin, and she cut her birthday cake.
The Detroit native planned to stay in New York for at least a day more, but don't expect much more celebrating for Franklin.
"I will be in a horizontal position tomorrow, all day!" she said.
Search for jury extended in case of Jackson doctor
LOS ANGELES – A judge concerned about finding enough jurors for the trial of Michael Jackson's doctor extended the search Friday, even after clearing 147 people who said they could spare the time for the anticipated two-month case.
Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor took the action after more than half of the 340 prospective jurors summoned Thursday for the trial of Dr. Conrad Murray were excused for hardships related to the length of the trial.
Pastor also suggested to lawyers in his chambers that an initial glance at jury questionnaires indicated many candidates might have to be eliminated because of strong views on the issues involved in the case.
Only three of the people in the first jury pool indicated they didn't know anything about the case.
The trial of Murray, a Houston cardiologist who has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter, is expected to draw worldwide attention.
Friday, Pastor emerged from a second day of meetings with lawyers in his chambers to screen written hardship forms and said, "I have to conclude we simply do not have a sufficient number of prescreened jurors. We do need an additional day of hardship screening."
Pastor ordered another pool of prospective jurors to be summoned for April 7. In-person jury selection is set for May 4. The judge told prospects to expect to serve until July 1.
Murray is accused of gross negligence in the death of the pop superstar who died of an overdose of the anesthetic propofol complicated by other sedatives.
The 50-year-old Jackson had been using propofol as a sleeping aid, according to testimony at a preliminary hearing earlier this year. The drug is not intended for home use and is usually given for surgery.
The doctor was introduced to prospective jurors and bid them good morning before they filled out their questionnaires. They showed no reaction and appeared to know beforehand which case they had been called for.
Superior Court Judge Michael Pastor took the action after more than half of the 340 prospective jurors summoned Thursday for the trial of Dr. Conrad Murray were excused for hardships related to the length of the trial.
Pastor also suggested to lawyers in his chambers that an initial glance at jury questionnaires indicated many candidates might have to be eliminated because of strong views on the issues involved in the case.
Only three of the people in the first jury pool indicated they didn't know anything about the case.
The trial of Murray, a Houston cardiologist who has pleaded not guilty to involuntary manslaughter, is expected to draw worldwide attention.
Friday, Pastor emerged from a second day of meetings with lawyers in his chambers to screen written hardship forms and said, "I have to conclude we simply do not have a sufficient number of prescreened jurors. We do need an additional day of hardship screening."
Pastor ordered another pool of prospective jurors to be summoned for April 7. In-person jury selection is set for May 4. The judge told prospects to expect to serve until July 1.
Murray is accused of gross negligence in the death of the pop superstar who died of an overdose of the anesthetic propofol complicated by other sedatives.
The 50-year-old Jackson had been using propofol as a sleeping aid, according to testimony at a preliminary hearing earlier this year. The drug is not intended for home use and is usually given for surgery.
The doctor was introduced to prospective jurors and bid them good morning before they filled out their questionnaires. They showed no reaction and appeared to know beforehand which case they had been called for.
Eddie Vedder sets 2011 summer tour dates
NEW YORK (Billboard) – Pearl Jam frontman Eddie Vedder will be hitting the road solo this summer in support of his just-announced new album, "Ukulele Songs."
The North American trek begins June 15 in Providence, R.I. and heads down the East Coast, across the Midwest and then up the West Coast before wrapping in Vedder's hometown of Seattle, with a show on July 15 at Benaroya Hall.
Oscar-winning singer/songwriter Glen Hansard is billed as a "special guest" for the whole tour.
Public ticket details have not yet been announced, but current members of Pearl Jam's fanclub are eligible for a pre-sale that begins on March 29.
As previously reported, "Ukulele Songs" will arrive on May 31, as will a Vedder live DVD, "Water On The Road," which was filmed in Washington D.C. in 2008.
The announcement of Vedder's tour comes as the latest piece of Pearl Jam and its members' packed schedule for 2011, which will find them hitting the studio in April to record a new album, which bassist Jeff Ament told Billboard.com last week they hope to release this year.
Sometime around Labor Day, the band will also have a festival celebrating its 20th anniversary, as well as a Cameron Crowe-directed documentary, "Pearl Jam Twenty," and accompanying book. Deluxe remastered reissues of Pearl Jam's 1993 album "Vs." and 1994's "Vitalogy," both featuring previously unreleased tracks, are due March 29.
Ament and guitarist McCready are currently on the road with side band Tres. Mts, and drummer Matt Cameron is in the process of recording an album with his other band, Soundgarden.
The North American trek begins June 15 in Providence, R.I. and heads down the East Coast, across the Midwest and then up the West Coast before wrapping in Vedder's hometown of Seattle, with a show on July 15 at Benaroya Hall.
Oscar-winning singer/songwriter Glen Hansard is billed as a "special guest" for the whole tour.
Public ticket details have not yet been announced, but current members of Pearl Jam's fanclub are eligible for a pre-sale that begins on March 29.
As previously reported, "Ukulele Songs" will arrive on May 31, as will a Vedder live DVD, "Water On The Road," which was filmed in Washington D.C. in 2008.
The announcement of Vedder's tour comes as the latest piece of Pearl Jam and its members' packed schedule for 2011, which will find them hitting the studio in April to record a new album, which bassist Jeff Ament told Billboard.com last week they hope to release this year.
Sometime around Labor Day, the band will also have a festival celebrating its 20th anniversary, as well as a Cameron Crowe-directed documentary, "Pearl Jam Twenty," and accompanying book. Deluxe remastered reissues of Pearl Jam's 1993 album "Vs." and 1994's "Vitalogy," both featuring previously unreleased tracks, are due March 29.
Ament and guitarist McCready are currently on the road with side band Tres. Mts, and drummer Matt Cameron is in the process of recording an album with his other band, Soundgarden.