Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Country singer Wynonna Judd marries for third time

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - American country singer Wynonna Judd has tied the knot for the third time, marrying her drummer fiance Cactus Moser.

Judd, 48, told Us Weekly magazine on Wednesday that the wedding took place on June 10 on her farm at Leiper's Fork in Tennessee.

'I felt a joy that hasn't been there before,' Judd told Us Weekly of the wedding.

Judd and Moser, 55, a drummer in the singer's band The Big Noise, announced their engagement in December 2011. It's the third marriage for the flame-haired singer, who found fame as a teenager on the country circuit in the 1980s with mother Naomi Judd.

Us Weekly said neither Naomi Judd, nor Wynonna's half-sister actress Ashley Judd, attended the wedding.

(Reporting By Jill Serjeant; Editing by Marguerita Choy)



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Beach Boys musical looking to catch a wave in Vegas

LAS VEGAS (Reuters) - As The Beach Boys travel the world on their 50th anniversary reunion tour, a musical about a surfer's adventures featuring the band's hit songs is hoping to catch a wave in the desert casino city of Las Vegas.

'Surf the Musical,' a 90-minute production showcasing 35 Beach Boys songs that embody the essence of California's surf culture, begins previews on Friday at the Planet Hollywood Resort & Casino before opening on July 17 for an indefinite run.

The show, featuring a live band and hit songs like 'Good Vibrations' and 'Surfin' USA', revolves around a surfer who leaves his California beach town for the big city, regrets his choice, and returns home to what he loves the most: waves, boards, and of course, a woman.

'Surf the Musical' is the fruition of a dream for producer J. Burton Gold, 69, a California businessman who has been a fan of the band since he was a teenager in the 1960s, and saw them live on their reunion tour in May.

Gold licensed the stage rights for dozens of Beach Boys songs for the show and brought in Kristin Hanggi, the Tony-nominated director of the hit Broadway musical 'Rock of Ages,' to bring it to the theater.

It's not the first time the Beach Boys have inspired a musical. 'Good Vibrations,' which followed three high school friends who drive to California, had a short-lived run on Broadway in 2005 after being savaged by New York theater critics.

But Gold said he wanted 'Surf the Musical' to 'honor and deliver the music,' without embedding it in an overly stylized production.

'I didn't want to 'Broadway-ize' it. I wanted to keep it Hawthorne,' he said, referring to the Southern California city where The Beach Boys was founded in 1961 by Brian Wilson, his late brothers Dennis and Carl, cousin Mike Love and their friend Al Jardine.

SCENES, SOUNDS OF THE 60S

'Surf the Musical' uses giant digital screens to project brightly colored backdrops of boardwalks, sunsets and 60's-era advertising.

Hanggi grew up in Huntington Beach - one of California's prime surfing spots - and when she was seven years old, she 'wore out' a cassette with the Beach Boys hit, 'Surfer Girl,' she said.

The new show was 'a homage to my family,' she said.

'I'm a So Cal girl and want to make a connection with people about what a real beach experience is like,' she said.

Hanggi said that the Las Vegas Strip was a natural choice for the show, especially given the brightly colored sets, which chime with the glare of the casinos and their glossy stage shows and larger-than-life musical arenas.

But Hanggi is nervous about one small group of spectators - the Beach Boys themselves.

The Beach Boys have had no practical involvement in the show and haven't been to rehearsals. Instead Brian Wilson, Love, Jardine and early band members Bruce Johnston and David Marks are busy on the U.S. leg of their 50th anniversary reunion world tour and have just released their first album of new material since 1989.

The album, 'That's Why God Made the Radio,' debuted at No. 3 on the Billboard chart last week, the highest-charting Beach Boys album in 37 years.

'They captured the optimism and heart of the beach, and the love and the fun,' said Hanggi. 'Wouldn't it be scary if they didn't like it?' she said.

(Editing by Jill Serjeant, Piya Sinha-Roy and Philip Barbara)



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Singer Bobby Brown remarries in Hawaii

(Reuters) - American singer Bobby Brown has remarried in Hawaii, four months after the drowning death of his ex-wife Whitney Houston, People magazine reported on Tuesday.

Photos of Brown, 43, a member of the New Edition band, his new wife and manager, Alicia Etheridge, and their wedding party were posted on Instagram by the singer's teenage son, Bobby Jr.

People magazine said the couple tied the knot on Monday, a day after Brown performed a New Edition concert in Honolulu.

Brown and Etheridge have a young son together and became engaged on stage in 2010 - three years after Brown's acrimonious divorce from 'I Will Always Love You' singer Houston.

Brown and Houston were married for 15 years, during which Houston developed a heavy addiction to cocaine, marijuana and crack. In an April TV interview, Brown hit back at suggestions that he got Houston hooked on drugs, or that he somehow played a role in her death.

Houston, 48, died of accidental drowning in a Beverly Hills hotel bathtub in February. White powder and drug paraphernalia were found in the bathroom where she died.

Brown has five children, one with Houston, three from previous relationships, and one with Etheridge. (Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Marguerita Choy)



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Monday, June 18, 2012

David Geffen to get the "American Masters" treatment

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - He helped bring Nirvana to the mainstream, co-founded DreamWorks SKG, and backed seminal Broadway shows like 'Cats' and 'Dreamgirls.'

Now David Geffen is receiving the 'American Masters' treatment courtesy of PBS, joining the likes of Woody Allen, Martha Graham, Norman Rockwell and Johnny Carson.

In addition, PBS said that it will air segments on Pulitzer Prize-winning biographer and poet Carl Sandburg and Joffrey Ballet, the dance company founded by Robert Joffrey and Gerald Arpino.

Unlike those other subjects, Geffen's contributions come not for his art, but for his keen eye for finding talent and for deal-making. He created both Geffen Records and Asylum Records, the homes to the likes of Joni Mitchell, Bob Dylan, Aerosmith and Sonic Youth.

But he did not just remain a music titan. Geffen produced films like 'Interview with the Vampire' and 'Risky Business,' before joining with Jeffrey Katzenberg and Steven Spielberg to launch DreamWorks SKG in 1994.

In its early years, while Geffen was still involved, the studio fielded such commercial and critical successes as 'American Beauty' and 'Saving Private Ryan.'

In addition to his work as a media mogul, Geffen, who was openly gay long before it was fashionable, let alone safe to be so, is also frequently linked with liberal causes and politicians like Bill Clinton.

He has also given money to AIDS groups and art foundations. Geffen's 'American Masters' episode will air on November 20 at 8 p.m.

The Sandburg segment will air on September 24 at 10 p.m. and the Joffrey Ballet episode will air on December 28 at 9 p.m.



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Blondie, Devo tap into 1980s nostalgia for upcoming tour

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Blondie and Devo, two pioneering bands of new wave music played different styles during their heyday, but more than three decades later, they've found common ground for an upcoming U.S. tour that vibrates with 1980s nostalgia.

Blondie, formed by Deborah Harry, guitarist Chris Stein and drummer Clem Burke in 1975, came up through the ranks of New York City's punk rock scene in the late 1970s, breaking into mainstream pop with their album 'Parallel Lines.'

Devo, formed in 1972 by brothers Mark and Bob Mothersbaugh and named for their concept that people of Earth were in a stage of 'de-evolution,' gained a loyal following with their wild costumes and high-energy music epitomized by the 1980 hit 'Whip It.'

The pair plan to 'Whip It to Shreds' - the name of their brief U.S. tour of 13 cities starting September 7.

'It seemed like a nice, complimentary fit because it takes us back all the way to the very beginning,' Devo singer Mark Mothersbaugh told Reuters as tickets went on sale last Friday.

Harry, the lead singer of Blondie, echoed Mothersbaugh's sentiments, adding that their music may resonate even deeper with today's audience - both young and old.

'I've always really loved their songs and their music and their crazy style,' Harry said about Devo. 'Back in the day, it was very fresh and advanced. I think it's more contemporary today than it was back then.'

Harry, 66, who has toured annually for the past 15 years and launched her own solo career, said she still loves hitting the road to play live.

'I love performing even more now. I've been doing it for long enough that it's completely heartwarming to walk out on stage and have people going crazy for you and wanting to hear your music, especially if you've written it yourself,' she said.

While audiences at Blondie shows often expect to hear the big hits - the band has sold over 40 million records worldwide - Harry said her favorite songs to perform are from the band's lesser-known albums, like 'Cautious Lip' and 'Bermuda Triangle Blues' from 1978's 'Plastic Letters.'

She maintains Blondie's live shows will be 'straight ahead rock 'n' roll,' but the band will incorporate some new elements such as visual projections and a 'technical look on stage' for their tour with Devo.

'Even when we were at the peak of our exposure and popularity, we never had a show with multiple costume changes and back-up singers and dancers,' Harry said.

Devo's portion of the show? That's a different story.

'DEVO HAS MARINATED THROUGH THE DECADES'

Known for their electro-pop sounds, creative outfits and frenzied stage shows, the dads of de-evolution bring back the synthesizers and guitars of decades ago, alongside newer technologies, to create their sound live.

Mothersbaugh, 62, promised some costume changes in their hour-long set and music that has never mellowed with age. If anything, it's only dug deeper into the Devo philosophy.

'Devo has marinated through the decades and become more scarier and intense, and if anyone wrote it off as quirky or a joke, now they can see that we were obsessed with a particular viewpoint of life on planet Earth,' he said.

The singer said Devo, whose first album 'Q: Are We Not Men? A: We Are Devo!' was produced by experimental music master Brian Eno, has seen a resurgence in recent years led by the popularity of electronic music and people discovering them on the Internet.

'Kids nowadays are more sophisticated about music,' Mothersbaugh said. 'They can find a band they're a fan of, and if the band says they listen to old Devo music, kids have enough information to get them interested and listening to things. The Internet had a lot to do with Devo's staying power here.'

Blondie reunited in 1997 due to the popularity of new bands like No Doubt and Garbage, which had a sound similar to Harry's group. Blondie released the album 'Panic of Girls' in 2011. Harry credited their longevity to their passion for music.

'I never thought we'd be working and making music this long, but the people I always really admired, the musicians like BB King or the Stones or Paul McCartney or Bob Dylan, music is their life,' Harry said. 'It's not just something you did in your youth. It's something that you live for.'

(Reporting By Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Stacey Joyce)



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Saturday, June 16, 2012

Radiohead Toronto show canceled after fatal stage collapse

TORONTO (Reuters) - A concert by the British rock band Radiohead was canceled after the roof of an outdoor stage collapsed during sound checks and rehearsals before the show on Saturday, killing one person and injuring three others, police and fire officials said.

Radiohead was not on stage at the time, police said, and a spokeswoman for the band confirmed that no member of the group was hurt in the accident, which occurred at about 4 p.m. local time at Downsview Park, about 5 miles north of downtown Toronto.

A Canadian musician named Dan Snaith, who performs under the name Caribou, had been set to open for Radiohead on Saturday, according to his website, but there was no immediate word on whether he was near the stage when the mishap occurred.

Representatives for the sold-out concert's promotion company, Live Nation, declined to comment. Downsview Park officials had no comment on the incident except to confirm that the Radiohead concert had been canceled as a result.

Toronto police spokesman Sergeant Tim Burrows told Reuters that about 20 people were in the direct vicinity of the stage, conducting rehearsals and sound checks, when it gave way.

A police statement issued on Twitter said one man in his 30s was pronounced dead at the scene and a 45-year-old man was taken to a local hospital with a non-life-threatening head injury. It said two other males were treated on the scene for less serious injuries.

Burrows said investigators were still unsure what caused the mishap, which was under investigation by the Ontario Ministry of Labor and the Toronto police.

'The roof part of the stage collapsed,' Toronto Fire Services spokesman Captain Mike Strapko told Reuters.

'It's like an arch made out of round piping similar to what they use for scaffolding,' he said, adding that the structure was rigged with lighting and other equipment. 'So that's what came down and did crush the one individual.'

Laura Eldeiry, a band spokeswoman, said Toronto was Radiohead's last stop on its North American tour.

Pictures of the scene posted on social media sites showed a large section of twisted metal scaffolding over and around the stage that had collapsed in the middle of the concert platform.

Radiohead, an alternative rock group led by singer Thom Yorke and famed for such hits as 'Creep' and 'Paranoid Android,' is scheduled to go on tour in Europe this summer.

Their 1997 album 'OK Computer' established the band as one of the top musical acts of the decade. The group made waves with its 2007 collection 'In Rainbows,' which the band ambitiously released first as a digital download while allowing customers to set their own price for it.

(Reporting by Frank McGurty in Toronto and Alex Dobuzinskis in Los Angeles; Writing by Steve Gorman; Editing by Anthony Boadle)



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Lindsay Lohan tweets about "cute" paramedics after exhaustion bout

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Actress Lindsay Lohan has taken to Twitter to explain a bout of exhaustion that led paramedics to be called to her hotel room, and she joked that emergency medical service personnel dispatched in such instances should at least be 'cute.'

The incident on Friday set celebrity websites and Twitter buzzing with unconfirmed reports the 25-year-old Lohan, who has struggled with drug and alcohol addiction, was rushed to a hospital. Her spokesman denied she was hospitalized and said she was treated at the hotel for exhaustion and dehydration.

In a humorous Twitter message posted on Lohan's site early on Saturday morning, the actress gave further explanation.

'Note to self: After working 85 hours in 4 days, and being up all night shooting, be very aware that you might pass out from exhaustion and 7 paramedics might show up at your door,' read the post. 'Hopefully they're cute. Otherwise it would be a real let down.'

Lohan had been working on a television movie, 'Liz and Dick,' about the storied romance of actors Elizabeth Taylor and Richard Burton.

In his statement on Friday, Lohan's spokesman, Steve Honig, said the actress had been taking a nap and that producers called paramedics out of concern when she did not emerge from her room on Friday morning.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Steve Gorman; Desking by Peter Cooney)



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Friday, June 15, 2012

Singer Scherzinger named judge on UK's X Factor

LONDON (Reuters) - Singer Nicole Scherzinger has been named as a judge on the British version of ratings juggernaut 'The X Factor', less than six months after being fired from the U.S. edition of the TV show.

The 33-year-old American is replacing compatriot Kelly Rowland, and joins Louis Walsh, Gary Barlow and Tulisa Contostavlos, all of whom appeared last season.

'I can't wait to see what talent the UK has to offer and to help inspire and bring out the best in these artists,' the former Pussycat Dolls singer said on Friday on the official website of the hit show.

'The X Factor' is aired in Britain on the commercial channel ITV and has faced increasing competition from the publicly funded BBC's 'Strictly Come Dancing', which regularly eclipsed it in the viewer ratings last year.

British media attributed the decline in viewers to the fact that the show's creator and star judge Simon Cowell, a television personality known for his acerbic on-screen style, left the show to launch the U.S. version.

'The X Factor' USA failed to meet Cowell's expectations, prompting the firing in January of Scherzinger, judge Paula Abdul and host Steve Jones.

In Britain, Scherzinger is well known as the girlfriend of Formula One racing driver Lewis Hamilton.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Jill Serjeant)



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Thai culture chiefs go Gaga over singer's "offensive" show

BANGKOK (Reuters) - Thailand's government has hit out at pop sensation Lady Gaga for a second time in as many weeks by filing a police complaint over the singer's 'offensive' use of its national flag during her sellout concert last month.

The Culture Ministry said Gaga's use of the flag, tied to the back of a motorcycle while dressed in provocative outfit, was 'inappropriate' and disrespectful to its people, a ministry official told Reuters, requesting anonymity because she was not authorized to speak to the media.

Lady Gaga performed before 50,000 fans in Bangkok on May 25 as part of a world tour that caused controversy in the Philippines and South Korea and prompted organizers to cancel her show in Indonesia after Islamic groups objected to her 'vulgar' style.

The Grammy Award winner had already upset some Thais when she Tweeted to her 24 million followers upon arrival in Bangkok her plans to buy a fake Rolex watch at one of the city's ubiquitous street markets.

The Tweet stirred debate in Internet chat rooms and on web boards, resulting in the Commerce Ministry lodging a complaint with the United States embassy, saying Gaga was undermining its efforts to stamp out piracy.

Many of Bangkok's indoor and outdoor markets are renowned for selling cheap replicas of coveted designer handbags and accessories. Gaga has made no comment on her Tweet.

The Culture Ministry said police would not prosecute Lady Gaga but it filed the formal complaint to show dissatisfaction.

The ministry has long been criticized for being overzealous in its censorship of films, music, television and some Western cultural practices in an attempt to preserve the traditional conservative values of a country that also has a reputation for racy night life and neon-lit go-go dancing bars.

(Reporting Amy Sawitta Lefevre; Editing by Martin Petty and Ron Popeski)



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Singer Chris Brown attacked in NY club: spokesman

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - R&B star Chris Brown was attacked in a fight at a New York club early on Thursday morning, his spokesman said, as rapper Drake was on his way out of the nightspot.

'Chris, Karrueche (Brown's girlfriend) and his friends were victims of a brutal attack last night at WIP. They sustained several injuries. Chris and his party are cooperating with NY authorities who are pursuing this incident further,' Brown's spokesman, Jeff Raymond, said in a statement

Drake's spokeswoman Allison Elbl Striegel issued a statement saying the 25-year-old singer 'did not participate in any wrongdoing of any kind last night at W.i.P. He was on his way out of the club when the altercation began. He did not engage in any activity which resulted in injury to person or damage to property.'

Details were not released by New York City police, who said they were investigating the incident at Manhattan club WIP in which eight men and women had cuts, bruises and other injuries.

An NYPD spokeswoman would not say if Brown, who won a Grammy for his album 'F.A.M.E.,' or Drake, whose hits include 'Take Care,' were involved. Brown tweeted a picture of his face with a cut on his chin, then deleted it.

Pictures of the nightclub with shattered glass and furniture strewn around a cavernous room were posted on the Internet, and celebrity websites carried reports from unnamed sources about a fight between friends and associates of the two singers.

Police said the injured were treated at a hospital and released.

Several celebrity media outlets reported that the fight broke out between Brown and Drake over singer Rihanna, who they both dated.

Brown, 23, was previously arrested and pleaded guilty to beating Rihanna in February 2009. He was sentenced to five years probation.

(Reporting By Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)



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Thursday, June 14, 2012

Mary J. Blige sings for Justice in "Rock of Ages"

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Grammy-winning R&B singer Mary J. Blige has always sung from her heart, telling of personal struggles on albums such as 'No More Drama' and 'Stronger with Each Tear.' She also has dabbled in acting with guest roles on TV's 'Ghost Whisperer' and in the Tyler Perry film 'I Can Do Bad All By Myself.'

On Friday, her acting and singing skills will both be on display in her most high-profile film role yet - Justice, owner of the Venus Gentlemen's Club in the rock musical 'Rock of Ages.'

In the adaptation of the Broadway musical, Blige belts out tunes like Journey's 'Any Way You Want It' and Pat Benatar's 'Shadows of the Night' while taking in an aspiring young singer named Sherrie (Julianne Hough) whose own Hollywood dreams have hit a low point.

Blige, 41, sat down with Reuters to talk about the role, her strong desire to mentor young women and the recent scandal that has plagued her female empowerment foundation.

Q: You play the owner of strip club in the film. Did you try and find some commonality between yourself and your character?

A: We have a lot in common. She was a protector of young women in that environment. She saw herself in Sherrie and wanted Sherrie to be better than her. And not be stuck in a place like a strip club.

Q: How does that relate to you?

A: The back story I gave Justice was that some man took the power from her when she was younger. And they kept taking it from her to the point that she ended up in place like (a strip club) to take the power back from them. A lot of that is Mary.

Q: Explain taking the power back?

A: Stand up for your rights, learning to not let your environment control how you feel about yourself, staying confident no matter where you are. Nurturing young women, being an inspiration to them. That's Mary.

Q: You lent one of your songs, 'Need Someone to Love You,' to the upcoming documentary 'The Invisible War,' which is about the rape of women within the U.S. military. How did that happen?

A: When they approached me about it, I was like, that's fine because people are hurting. It was a way of giving back. When you're lending your voice, you're saving a life.

Q: Why is helping others so important to you?

A: I think the more you have, the more you're supposed to give. It would be real selfish of people like myself not to give, not to want to help someone. I remember when I was that girl, so why wouldn't I want to help? To sit and be selfish, to sit on all (your success), what are you doing with it? It's not moving, it's not going anywhere, so you're not growing. When you help others, you grow.

Q: With that said, it must have been tough to learn last month that your charity, The Mary J. Blige and Steve Stoute Foundation For the Advancement Of Women Now Inc, was being accused of mishandling funds and cheating scholarship students.

A: The lives of young women are at stake. I feel what they feel. I don't want them to suffer. I promised them something and I'm gonna deliver. Period.

Q: For your music fans, when will you deliver the sequel to last fall's album, 'My Life II ... The Journey Continues (Act 1)'?

A: We already have songs for 'Act 2' and we're still recording a couple of new ones. Right now, we're rehearsing a tour for 'Act 1,' which starts in August. The sequel will be next year.

Q: Any more plans to act?

A: I'm going to do a Lifetime movie called 'Parallel Lives' about the lives of Coretta Scott King and Betty Shabazz, the widows of Martin Luther King and Malcolm X. It's about what they had to deal with when their men were fighting for freedom. It's powerful.

Q: Who will you play?

A: 'I'm supposed to play Betty but I'm on the fence. Betty, or Coretta? We'll figure it out. It's Betty for now, but when you see the movie and I'm Coretta...(laughs)

Q: Getting back to 'Rock of Ages,' what do you hope to get out of it? It's your first time as part of such a high-profile cast with actors like Tom Cruise and Alec Baldwin.

A: This is my big break for people to see me not as the greatest actress but as someone who is on her way to doing something great. Because she's trying to do the work.

(Reporting By Zorianna Kit; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Bill Trott)



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Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Magazine apologizes to Morrissey over "racism" slur

LONDON (Reuters) - Music magazine NME has apologized to Morrissey for a 2007 article which the former Smiths frontman complained suggested he was a racist.

Morrissey, 53, sued the publication for a story titled 'Morrissey: Big Mouth Strikes Again' in which he discussed the issue of immigration in Britain.

The case had been due to go to court after the singer won a pre-trial hearing at the High Court in October where the publication had sought to strike out his claim on the grounds of delay.

'NME is pleased that it has buried the hatchet with Morrissey in respect of the libel case he brought against us in 2007,' a statement from the magazine said.

'Morrissey sued over an article based on interviews with him which he believed accused him of racism.

'After an on-going dialogue with Morrissey and his representatives, NME today (Tuesday) publishes a clarification in the magazine and online which makes it clear that we do not believe we ever called Morrissey a racist and nor do we believe he is.

'We have said sorry to Morrissey for any misunderstanding that may have arisen.'

The publication added that the settlement did not involve payment of damages or legal costs to the singer. A 'small' sum was paid by NME last year on the court's orders.

In the original article, Morrissey was asked if he would ever move back to England, and was quoted as saying in reply:

'With the issue of immigration, it's very difficult because, although I don't have anything against people from other countries, the higher the influx into England the more the British identity disappears.'

Morrissey's lawyer, John Reid, of Russells Solicitors, said: 'My client is obviously pleased that the NME have finally and publicly apologized to him.

'This claim was never about financial damages, and no money was sought as part of a settlement. The NME apology in itself is settlement enough, and it closes the case'.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)



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Former music royalties executive dies in Nashville

NASHVILLE, Tenn. (AP) - Frances Williams Preston, who worked with top songwriters as president of the royalties company Broadcast Music Inc., died Wednesday. She was 83.

Preston was president of New York-based BMI, which collects and distributes royalties to songwriters, from 1986 to 2004. Before that, she was head of the company's office in Nashville, where she was born and grew up.

Family spokeswoman Caroline Davis said Preston died at home of congestive heart failure.

During her career, Preston worked with dozens of artists including Kris Kristofferson, Dolly Parton, Willie Nelson, Roy Orbison, Loretta Lynn, Waylon Jennings and Tammy Wynette. As BMI president, she oversaw a company that represented Paul Simon, Janet Jackson, Sting and others.

In 1998, Preston received the highest Grammy award given to a non-performer, the National Trustees Award from the National Academy of Recording Arts and Sciences.

She was a member of the Broadcasting & Cable Hall of Fame, the Country Music Hall of Fame and the Gospel Music Hall of Fame.

Preston was credited with coining the Nashville songwriter's creed, 'It all begins with a song.'

A 1986 Fortune magazine article called her 'one of the true powerhouses of the pop music business.'

She retired from BMI in 2004 and returned to Nashville in 2007.

During her tenure as BMI president, the company enjoyed a consistent record of increasing revenues and royalty distribution to its more than 300,000 songwriters and music publishers. She also helped pioneer the licensing of new digital media.



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Tuesday, June 12, 2012

Grammy Awards to the Emmys: hey, notice us!

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - The Grammy Awards, which typically get no respect the Television Academy, have launched an Emmy campaign in an attempt to get Emmy voters to recognize an historic year for what Grammy staffers say is the biggest, most difficult awards show of all.

The tricky part is that one of the things that made the 2012 Grammys stand out is that they took place a little more than 24 hours after the death of Whitney Houston - and by drawing attention to the way in which the show responded to that event, Grammy organizers run the risk of appearing to use the tragedy as a campaign tactic.

At an event at the Television Academy in North Hollywood on Monday night, 32-time Grammy executive producer Ken Ehrlich admitted that he had never before done any kind of campaigning for the show.

Over the years, the Grammys have been nominated for 55 Emmys, but have only won 17, short of the 19 won by the Tonys and the Kennedy Center Honors, and far short of the 46 won by the Oscars.

'It is definitely the hardest show that I've ever done,' said director Louis J. Horvitz, a veteran of numerous Oscars, Kennedy Center Honors and other awards shows. 'It's like a bullet train: 5,4,3,2,1, and you just hope to come out the other end and arrive in one piece.'

Although it is the largest-scale production, usually staged in L.A.'s enormous Staples Center and consisting of two dozen often-lavish performances and only about 10 awards, the Grammys have never won the top award in the genre, Outstanding Variety, Music or Comedy Special - or the current category in which they compete, Best Special Class Program.

The Kennedy Center Honors have won seven times, including the last three in a row in their category; the Tonys have won four times and the Oscars twice.

'Obviously we'd like to have you consider us when you vote,' said Ehrlich to a theater full of voters on Monday night. 'We have been nominated before, and not won.'

The idea, he said, came out of a meeting with CBS executives, who said, 'Look, you have a great story to tell this year.'

In addition to reacting to the death of Whitney Houston, this year's show included the first performance of Adele after microsurgery on her throat, and a jam session on the medley that ends the Beatles' 'Abbey Road' album, with Paul McCartney, Bruce Springsteen, Dave Grohl and Joe Walsh.

The show attracted 39 million viewers and beat the Oscars in the ratings for the first time.

To tell that story, Ehrlich prepared a 26-minute film, entitled 'A Death in the Family: The Grammys Show Goes On,' recapping the events of February, in which show officials learned of Houston's death late the afternoon before the show.

After screening the film, which is also available to Emmy voters online and to the public at grammy.com, Ehrlich participated in a lengthy Q&A with Horvitz, host LL Cool J, Grohl, Recording Academy president Neil Portnow, co-producer Terry Lickona and talent producer Chantel Sausedo. It was moderated by the show's writer, David Wild, who called the Grammys 'far and away the most ambitious event of the year.'

The film focuses on how well the Grammy staff responded to the death of Houston, which at times made it feel vaguely exploitative. It also pushes hard for Academy recognition for LL Cool J's performance as host, and tries to emphasize how difficult the show always is to pull off.

'It can be, at its best, a document of record about what music is,' said Ehrlich.

'I think of it as a celebration of music,' added Lickona, who went so far as to suggest that the awards themselves aren't always that important at the Grammys - that some artists, in fact, 'are almost embarrassed when they win.'

This immediately caught LL Cool J's attention. 'Embarrassed when you win?' he asked, incredulous. 'Who feels that way?'



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Monday, June 11, 2012

Slipknot unveils songs, art, on new "best-of" album

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Grammy-winning heavy metal band Slipknot unveiled the artwork and tracklist for their upcoming 'best-of' album on Monday, their first release since the 2010 death of bassist Paul Gray.

'Antennas To Hell,' due out on July 24 in the United States, will encompass some of the band's best-known singles from their last four studio albums, including 'Spit It Out,' 'Left Behind' and 'Vermilion.'

'I think every song Slipknot has ever written is a greatest hit, so it was hard (to narrow it down), but at the same time there's only four records, so we did stick a couple of live songs on,' band member Shawn 'Clown' Crahan told Reuters.

'It all falls together the way it needs to.'

Slipknot, founded by Gray and Crahan in Des Moines, Iowa, in 1995, has eight members -- Crahan and Chris Fehn on percussion, lead singer Corey Taylor, Sid Wilson on turntables, guitarists Jim Root and Mick Thomson, Craig '133' Jones on sampling and drummer Joey Jordison.

Following Gray's death from an accidental overdose in 2010, the band's future has been hotly debated in the world of music with media outlets posting conflicting reports on the end of Slipknot, something Crahan said has amused him.

'We as a band have never decided to go away. We've never even talked about it; it's not even a question. The only question was how long it was going to take each individual member to accept what's happened and feel comfortable with moving on in the record area,' said Crahan.

'Paul was the major part of writing records. It's not only my brother that I'm not seeing, but it's also what he brought to the table,' added the percussionist.

Crahan said the band will be stepping away from the spotlight after playing a series of summer festivals, so that band members can go through 'the healing process' and work on a new record. He said the lyrics were already being written for the next album and the artwork would be 'severely involved.'

The band released four studio albums over the years, 1999's self-titled debut, 2001's 'Iowa,' 2004's 'Vol. 3: (The Subliminal Verses)' and 2008's 'All Hope Is Gone,' selling more than 20 million records worldwide.

'Antennas To Hell' packages notes on their career with a DVD of a live show at 2009's Download Festival, video montages of Slipknot and its members, and the 19-song compilation.

Along with the album, the band is headlining festivals over the U.S. summer before taking the helm of their very own, the first annual Knotfest, taking place in Council Bluffs, Iowa, on August 17 and in Minneapolis, Minnesota on August 18.

'Now is the best time to exercise the philosophy of this beautiful art thing that we're going to make known as Knotfest,' said Crahan. 'The community is what we want to bring back, I want to bring back the intimacy of concerts.'

The tracklist for 'Antennas To Hell' is as follows:

1. (sic)

2. Eyeless

3. Wait And Bleed

4. Spit It Out

5. Surfacing

6. People = Shit

7. Disasterpiece

8. Left Behind

9. My Plague (New Abuse Mix)

10. The Heretic Anthem (live)

11. Purity (live)

12. Pulse Of The Maggots

13. Duality

14. Before I Forget

15. Vermilion

16. Sulfur

17. Psychosocial

18. Dead Memories

19. Snuff

(This version of the story has been corrected to fix a typo in second paragraph)

(Editing by David Brunnstrom)



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