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Monday, April 30, 2012

Not my time to go, says ousted "Idol" Elise Testone

Contestant Elise Testone poses at the party for the finalists of the television show ''American Idol'' in Los Angeles, California March 1, 2012. REUTERS/Mario Anzuoni

Contestant Elise Testone poses at the party for the finalists of the television show ''American Idol'' in Los Angeles, California March 1, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Mario Anzuoni

LOS ANGELES | Fri Apr 27, 2012 2:42pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Ousted "American Idol" singer Elise Testone said on Friday she was proud of her song choices and performances on the show, even though they may not have connected with the voting public.

But bluesy rock singer Testone, the oldest of the contest's Top 10 at 28, said she had hoped to stay on and fight another day.

"I was a little bit surprised because in my heart I didn't feel it was time for me to go. But it wasn't a total shock because being in the bottom three that many times it was inevitable it would happen sometime. But I guess I just felt like a fighter and that I was going to push through," Testone told reporters the day after her exit.

Testone finished in 6th place in the TV competition after her rendition this week of Queen's "I Want it All" and the Jimi Hendrix number "Bold as Love" - songs that reflected her rocker style - were criticized by the judges.

The songs put the vocal coach from South Carolina in the bottom three yet again.

"I think the majority of voting comes from middle America so if I can't win them over it's not going to happen. I felt if I was honest and sung from my heart and my passion, that was the best I could do," Testone said.

"Those were the best choices for me," she said of her performances this week, "but probably the majority of people at home want to be able to sing along."

Over the last several weeks on the show, a frustrated Testone challenged some of the conflicting comments from the "Idol" judges and the show's record producer mentor Jimmy Iovine.

"I felt like sometimes the criticism didn't line up, or it was discrediting the things I have achieved...so that was hard," she said.

"I am confident in myself, and that's why I did speak up sometimes because I believe in certain things and I don't want to just keep my mouth shut and smile. I never was trying to be rude or argumentative. It was just honesty," she added.

Testone's exit leaves five singers in the battle for the "American Idol" title and a recording contract. Next week Hollie Cavanagh, Skylar Laine, Joshua Ledet, Phillip Phillips and Jessica Sanchez will sing for America's votes in a British-themed show, and both Coldplay and former "Idol" champion Carrie Underwood will perform.

(Reporting By Jill Serjeant; Editing by Piya Sinha-Roy)


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Adele's label XL is big winner at Music Week Awards

LONDON | Fri Apr 27, 2012 5:47am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Record label XL was the big winner at the Music Week Awards late on Thursday, picking up four prizes mainly for its work on Adele's chart-topping "21".

At a ceremony in central London, music business publication Music Week honored XL Recordings with the A & R Award, the artist marketing campaign prize for 21 and the best record company award.

Richard Russell, XL Recordings boss, also picked up the outstanding contribution prize, while Adele turned up to present her manager Jonathan Dickins with his manager of the year award.

XL, which is independent but dubbed a "mini-major" by the music trade after it's huge success with Adele and other acts, began in 1989 as a specialist rave label.

The big breakthrough came in 1997 with The Prodigy's hit album "The Fat of the Land", which reached number one in 26 countries including the United States.

The label branched out to other genres, signing artists like Dizzee Rascal, The White Stripes and, crucially, Adele.

The British singer's second album "21" has sold more than 20 million copies worldwide, earned her a raft of major music awards and turned her into one of the biggest names in pop.

Among the other winners on the night was BBC's Radio 6 program, which picked up the radio station and radio show awards, the latter going to DJ Steve Lamacq.

Following is a list of the main Music Week Awards:

- Live Music Venue: 02 Shepherd's Bush Empire

- A&R Award: XL Recordings

- Manager Of The Year: Jonathan Dickins, September Management

- Publisher of the Year - Singles: EMI Music Publishing

- Publisher of the Year - Albums: Universal Music Publishing

- Independent Publisher: Kobalt

- High Street Retail Brand: HMV

- Online Retail Brand: iTunes

- Independent Retailer: Sound it Out Records

- Non-Retail Digital Music Service: Spotify

- Radio Station: 6Music

- Radio Show: Steve Lamacq, 6Music

- TV Show Featuring Music: Later ... with Jools Holland

- Promotions Team: Atlantic

- Sales Team: PIAS

- Distribution Team: Proper Distribution

- Catalogue Marketing Campaign: Rhino for The Smiths Complete

- Artist Marketing Campaign: XL Recordings for 21 by Adele

- PR Campaign: Purple PR for 21 by Adele

- Independent Record Company: Bella Union

- Record Company: XL Recordings

- The Strat: Richard Russell, XL Recordings

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


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Sunday, April 29, 2012

Track Review: Of Monsters and Men, 'Little Talks'

by Ryan Reed  |   April 29, 2012 10:00 EDT

OF MONSTERS AND MEN
"Little Talks" (4:26)
Producers: Of Monsters and Men, Ingolfur Arnarsson
Writer: Of Monsters and Men
Publishers: Amar Rosenkranz Hilmarsson/Brynjar Leifsson/Nanna Bryndís Hilmarsdóttir/Ragnar Porhallsson (BMI)
Skrimslehflaekjaras 1/Universal Republic

One could probably count the number of successful Icelandic musical imports on one hand, and based on the influence of forward-thinking acts like Björk and Sigur Rós, Iceland is now stereotyped as a glacial nation of insular, twinkling art-rock experimenters. But with its boisterously catchy single "Little Talks," indie-pop sextet Of Monsters and Men aims to set the record straight, clearing off decades of cultural cobwebs with a blast of radiant sonic sunshine. "I don't like walking around this old and empty house," Nanna Bryndís Hilmarsdóttir sings in a soulful, ecstatic croon. "So hold my hand/I'll walk with you, my dear." It's a simple lyrical message, but the group's innocent, hook-filled ruckus speaks volumes. Underneath the vocals, Of Monsters and Men conjures epic sea-shanty joy, with brass blasts and gang hand claps punctuating acoustic strums and clattering drums.

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Friday, April 20, 2012

Weekly Chart Notes: Madonna, Justin Bieber, Silversun Pickups

WE LOVE THE '80s: "What's going on family? Can you believe we are sitting on the top of the charts together again?," Lionel Richie Tweeted to Madonna Wednesday (April 4). Madonna's "MDNA" and Richie's "Tuskegee" bow at Nos. 1 and 2, respectively, on the Billboard 200 this week.

"There is no one I would rather be on top with," Richie added, to which Madonna wryly replied, "OK, but as long as I'm on top."

Despite boasting a combined five No. 1 albums on the Billboard 200 in the '80s, the pair had never ranked in the survey's top two concurrently until this week. The superstar veterans had last charted in the top five together the week of Oct. 4, 1986, when the top of the tally looked like this:

No. 1, "Dancing on the Ceiling," Lionel Richie
No. 2, "Top Gun," soundtrack
No. 3, "Raising Hell," Run-D.M.C.
No. 4, "Fore!," Huey Lewis & the News

No. 5, "True Blue," Madonna

(The artist directly below Madonna and Richie on this week's chart - Adele - was not even born as of that chart date. She turns 24 on May 5.)

GLORY DAYS: Madonna and Richie aren't the only legends with a history of '80s success in this week's Billboard 200 top 10. Bruce Springsteen dips 6-9 with his former No. 1 "Wrecking Ball."

The Queen of Pop and the Boss hadn't shared space in the chart's top region since the week of February 7, 1987, when "Bruce Springsteen & the E Street Band 1975-1985" placed at No. 8 and "True Blue" held at No. 10.

The last time that Springsteen and Richie appeared in the top 10 in the same week? Jan. 24, 1987, also the last week that all three acts had charted together in the top bracket until this week. That frame, Springsteen's "Live" remained at No. 2, "True Blue" descended 6-7 and Richie's "Dancing on the Ceiling" stayed at No. 9.

'BOYFRIEND' IS BACK: Justin Bieber's "Boyfriend" storms in as the Billboard Hot 100's second-most-popular song. It's also the second-highest-peaking track featuring the word "boyfriend."

As Chart Beat temporarily borrows from Teen Beat, only two songs with the word "boyfriend" in their titles have hit the Hot 100's top 10:

No. 1 (three weeks), "My Boyfriend's Back," the Angels, 1963
No. 2 (as of this week), "Boyfriend," Justin Bieber, 2012

In a chart battle of the sexes, one "girlfriend" song has also reigned, although one more such hit has reached the top 10:

No. 1 (one week), "Girlfriend," Avril Lavigne, 2007
No. 5, "Girlfriend," 'N Sync featuring Nelly, 2002
No. 5, "Girlfriend," Pebbles, 1988

Honorary mention among Hot 100 tributes to going steady: at the height of Beatlemania, teen singer Donna Lynn charted for four weeks with the spoofy "My Boyfriend Got a Beatle Haircut."

Despite piggybacking onto the Beatles' early adoration, Lynn and her song stopped at No. 83 on the March 21, 1964, Hot 100. The same week, the Fab Four (mop-)topped the chart with "She Loves You," which dethroned their first No. 1, "I Want to Hold Your Hand," after seven weeks at the summit.

65(-WEEK) LOVE AFFAIR: Adele's "Rolling in the Deep" ties for the third-longest stay in the Hot 100's 53-year history. At 65 weeks (falling 43-49), the song now trails only Jason Mraz's "I'm Yours" (the record-holder with 76 weeks) and LeAnn Rimes' "How Do I Live" (69). Jewel's double-sided "You Were Meant for Me"/" Foolish Games" also logged 65 chart weeks.

("Deep" will need to remain above No. 50 on next week's Hot 100 to tally a 66th frame, as descending songs below the chart's top half are removed after 20 weeks.)

'ENDINGS' BEGINS: Silversun Pickups arrive on Alternative Songs at No. 22 and Rock Songs at No. 39 with "Bloody Mary (Nerve Endings)." The track previews the group's third album, "Neck of the Woods," due May 8.

The Los Angeles-based band has scored four Alternative Songs top 10s, including the 2009 No. 1 "Panic Switch."

"There was a playfulness and an experimentation that we lost a little bit of along the way," says Silversun Pickups frontman Brian Aubert. "(The new album was) kind of like, 'let's get back to playing with different drum tones and playing with these pads.' It sounds like a cool, digital drum thing.

"And then it was, 'how do we find the humanity in all that?'

"And then, we played some basketball."


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Thursday, April 19, 2012

Nicki Minaj, Rascal Flatts Aiming for Top of Billboard 200

by Keith Caulfield, L.A.  |   April 06, 2012 8:23 EDT

Nicki Minaj is on track to score her second No. 1 album on the Billboard 200, while Rascal Flatts is heading for its eighth top 10 set.

Industry sources suggest Minaj's "Roman Reloaded" will sell around 215,000 to 235,000 and easily debut at No. 1 while Rascal Flatts' "Changed" may start in the No. 3 slot with around 100,000 to 120,000. (The sales tracking week for next week's Billboard charts ends on Sunday, April 8.)

The new Billboard 200 chart's top 10 will be revealed on the morning of Wednesday, April 11.

Rascal Flatts should also debuted at No. 1 on our Country Albums chart, netting its seventh leader. All of the band's studio sets have bowed at No. 1, save for its self-titled 2000 debut. It bowed at No. 14 on the Country tally, on its way to a No. 3 peak.

Lionel Richie's "Tuskegee," which opened at No. 2 on the Billboard 200 this past week with 199,000 sold (according to Nielsen SoundScan), should see a relatively slight second-week decrease in sales. It will probably sell around 100,000 copies and end up in the top five. Easter week shopping is likely helping its sales, as is a solid slate of promotional activities. This week, Richie was interviewed on NPR's "All Things Considered" (April 2), played "The Ellen DeGeneres Show" the same day, performed on "Jimmy Kimmel Live" (4) and sang on "The Talk" (5).

However, the woman who beat him for the top of the chart -- Madonna -- will likely take a significant tumble with her No. 1 set "MDNA." It will perhaps move 50,000 copies this week and may end up around Nos. 10 or 11 next week. It bowed at No. 1 with 359,000. Her first week was bolstered by sales gained from a concert ticket/album promotion as well as banked pre-orders from iTunes. So, a sizable second-week drop was expected.

On Nielsen SoundScan's Building chart (below), Minaj's "Roman Reloaded" is No. 1, Adele's "21" is No. 2 and Rascal Flatts is No. 3. The Building tally is a precursor to the final Billboard 200 ranking -- reflecting the first four days (Monday through Thursday) of SoundScan's tracking week as reported by six major merchants.

One Direction's "Up All Night" in in fifth place, Of Monsters & Men's "My Head is an Animal" is sixth and the soundtrack to "The Hunger Games" is seventh. Marvin Sapp's new "I Win" is at No. 8, Alabama Shakes' "Boys & Girls" is No. 9 and Shinedown's "Amaryllis" is at No. 10.

Nielsen SoundScan Building ChartThe Building Chart reflects the first four days (Monday through Thursday) of SoundScan's tracking week (which ends Sunday) as reported by six major merchants: iTunes, Trans World Entertainment, Best Buy, Starbucks, Target and Anderson Merchandisers. Billboard estimates that they make up about 85% of all U.S. album sales.

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London music fest gambles on little-known Nancarrow

By Michael Roddy

LONDON | Thu Apr 5, 2012 2:47pm EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - Avant garde rock star Frank Zappa said his music sounded like "bionic ragtime", the U.S. government considered him an unwelcome communist and Spanish dictator Francisco Franco's soldiers wanted to kill him.

So what else was Conlon Nancarrow, a native of Texarkana, Arkansas, to do but move to Mexico, give up his U.S. citizenship and write music mostly for the player piano, of all the instruments under the sun, that is now considered to be among the most influential produced in the 20th century?

Nancarrow, who died in 1997, often is described as "the greatest composer you've never heard of", but for Rex Lawson, who will be in charge of live performances of Nancarrow's player piano works at a weekend-long festival at London's Southbank Centre April 21-22, he is nothing less than a modern Bach.

"I've always felt in a sense that Bach is the center of the universe...and you get that sort of feeling with Conlon, mixed in with excitement and wit," Lawson, who is a specialist in player pianos and knew Nancarrow, told Reuters in an interview.

"Almost all his pieces have at the end something that makes an audience smile, a kind of sideways twinkle of the eye -- and he was like that."

Southbank is taking a gamble putting on a weekend of music and art celebrating the works of a composer so little known to the general public.

Organizers are hoping the wit, as well as the genius, of this iconoclast who joined the American Communist Party in the 1930s, fought with the Abraham Lincoln Brigade to defend the Spanish republic, and felt the chill wind of anti-communism when he made it home alive, will shine through.

"My real aim for this is it should be entertaining," said Dominic Murcott, head of music composition at Trinity Laban Conservatory of Music and Dance, which is a partner in the weekend's activities, along with the London Sinfonietta.

"It might take a little bit of work, but I hope it will put a smile on your face."

Although Nancarrow did write "ragtime that's totally bionic" as Zappa, who became a composer himself after he moved on from the seminal Mothers of Invention 1960s rock band, put it, his real specialty was testing the boundaries of time. One of his studies for player piano consists of no fewer than 12 melodic lines, each progressing at a different tempo.

"FISTFULS OF NOTES"

Much of his music can be described as sounding like "fistfuls of notes" moving along at such tremendous speed that no human pianist could ever hope to play it -- hence the player piano.

The one that will be gracing the small, 380-seat Purcell Room of the Queen Elizabeth Hall is, Southbank says in its publicity material, "an original Ampico reproducing piano identical to the composer's own".

Lawson, who will be at the controls, is thrilled the programs might lead the audience to think that he and Wolfgang Heisig, a German Nancarrow devotee, will be playing the Ampico, when, he admits, "We don't do anything -- all we do is switch the piano on."

The piano, and the paper rolls filled with slits that Nancarrow used to painstakingly cut out, but now can be produced by computer technology, do the rest, but that does not mean Lawson and Heisig are off the hook. They will be saying a bit about the music while the rolls are being rewound and changed, which is something Murcott thinks is essential.

"I think for better or worse, Nancarrow needs a map to really enjoy...It's like a piece of conceptual art. No one really creates a piece of conceptual art without a kind of thesis that goes with it," Murcott said.

"So this will be trying to welcome people into this guy's world."

In addition to the 50-odd studies and other pieces Nancarrow created for the player piano, the weekend will feature the London Sinfonietta in a program of his large-scale works.

The Arditti String Quartet, for whom the composer wrote his String Quartet No. 3, will play all of the quartets, a player piano study arranged for quartet and the String Quartet No. 2 by the Hungarian modernist Gyorgy Ligeti, a big Nancarrow admirer.

To enhance the mood, the Queen Elizabeth Hall will be the setting for the first British display of German-born sound installation artist Trimpin's "Conloninpurple", described as consisting of "10 hanging chains of fuchsia-colored trumpets" and having an acoustic range of five octaves.

Hearing will be believing, which is exactly what Southbank wants.

"We are thrilled to be hosting the first UK celebration of one of the most innovative composers of the 20th century," Gillian Moore, head of classical music at Southbank, said.

"For those not familiar with Nancarrow's music, this immersive live experience is the perfect opportunity to understand where so much avant-garde contemporary music comes from."

(Editing by Paul Casciato)


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Wednesday, April 18, 2012

Kanye West raps of love for Kim Kardashian

Recording artist Kanye West sits courtside as he attends the NBA basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and Chicago Bulls in Los Angeles December 25, 2011. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok

Recording artist Kanye West sits courtside as he attends the NBA basketball game between the Los Angeles Lakers and Chicago Bulls in Los Angeles December 25, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Danny Moloshok

LOS ANGELES | Thu Apr 5, 2012 6:02pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Kanye West professed his love for reality TV star Kim Kardashian in a new song leaked online on Thursday, and the pair were spotted out on the town in New York together.

In "Theraflu," named after the over-the-counter cough medicine, West raps about falling in love with the "Keeping Up With The Kardashians" star at the same time she fell in love with Kris Humphries, who she divorced last November after 72 days of marriage.

West also made a reference to not having rapper Jay-Z, who has minority stakes in the New Jersey Nets basketball team for which Humphries plays, remove the basketball player from the team.

"And I'll admit, I fell in love with Kim, 'round the same time she had fell in love with him, well, that's cool, baby girl, do ya thing, lucky I ain't have Jay drop him from the team," rapped West, over hip hop beats by DJ Khaled.

West and Kardashian were photographed on Thursday having lunch together at a New York restaurant, but they declined to speak to media gathered outside. The pair also spent much of Wednesday night together, taking in "The Hunger Games" movie, a live New York show and seeing a band perform at a bar, celebrity magazine Us Weekly reported.

Elsewhere on the "Theraflu" single, West brims with his trademark confidence and ego with lines such as "tell PETA my mink is dragging on the floor," and "don't talk about style, cause I embarrass you," bragging about dinner with Vogue editor Anna Wintour and racing with Polish model Anja Rubik.

The rapper also alludes to ex-girlfriend Amber Rose, whom he dated on and off for two years until 2010 and who is now engaged to rapper Wiz Khalifa. West says he has "respect" for Khalifa.

West, who last made headlines in January after posting a series of more than 80 tweets detailing his diverse "train of thoughts," has stayed under the radar in recent weeks, posting only a couple of tweets and making few public appearances.

"Theraflu" has served to further whet the appetite of fans and critics for the release on Friday of a new single "Mercy", featuring West and other artists signed to his G.O.O.D Music record and management label.

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


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Tuesday, April 17, 2012

Listen: Kanye West's Five Best GOOD Friday Songs

On Friday (Apr. 6) -- the actual Good Friday holiday -- Kanye West revived his GOOD Friday release series, which features a new single posted online every Friday as a free giveaway to the rapper's rabid fans, with "Mercy," a new track featuring 2 Chainz, Big Sean and Pusha T. The series originally began in 2010 while West was gearing up for his fifth full-length, "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy": by releasing a few tracks from the album as freebies and putting out some leftover cuts for the fans, West turned an uncomplicated weekly release program into the coolest new way to issue new music.

Kanye West and DJ Khaled Release 'Theraflu' Song: Listen

Now that "Mercy," which previews West's G.O.O.D. Music compilation, has hit the Web, take a listen to Kanye West's five best GOOD Friday releases so far, from classic "Fantasy" cuts to awesome one-off singles.

5. "Christmas in Harlem"
Featuring: Cam'ron, Jim Jones, Vado, CyHi da Prynce, Pusha T, Musiq Soulchild, Teyana Taylor, Big Sean
Released: Friday, Dec. 17, 2010

For the first GOOD Friday song after the release of "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy," Yeezy issued a holiday-themed banger, complete with a lovely choral hook and nearly impossible number of featured performers. Big Sean, who brags that he's "rocking dashiki's with a yamulkah,"is on fire here.  

4. "The Joy"
Featuring: Pete Rock, Jay-Z, Charlie Wilson, Curtis Mayfield, Kid Cudi
Released: Friday, Oct. 29, 2010

This soulful jam eventually made it onto the deluxe edition of "Watch The Throne," and for good reason -- its aching sample matches Yeezy's self-loathing rhymes and Jay's disaffected coolness. 

3. "So Appalled"
Featuring: Jay-Z, Pusha T, RZA, Swizz Beatz, CyHi da Prynce
Released: Sept. 24, 2010

There's nothing too fancy about "So Appalled" -- the track, which made it onto "MBDTF," simply showcases four MCs (Kanye, Jay, Pusha and CyHi) absolutely murdering their verses and moving over the sweeping production as one cohesive unit. Who has the best verse? A case can be made for all four rappers.

2. "Good Friday"
Featuring: Common, Pusha T, Big Sean, Kid Cudi, Charlie Wilson
Released: Sept. 10, 2010

The spright, carefree vibe of "Good Friday" never fit in thematically with the dark, dramatic cuts of Kanye's "My Beautiful Dark Twisted Fantasy," which is presumably why it didn't make the finished album. Still, it's a shame, because "Good Friday" is positively vibrant. From Pusha' assured boasting to Kid Cudi's selfless hook-assisting to the singsong chorus, "Good Friday" holds up with the best posse cuts of this fresh decade.

1. "Monster"
Featuring: Jay-Z, Rick Ross, Nicki Minaj, Bon Iver
Released: Aug. 27, 2010

GOOD Fridays may have officially launched with the "Power" remix a week earlier, but the series went from "This is cool" to "Oh wow, I have to hear this new Kanye song every single week" when "Monster" was released. The "MBDTF" highlight possesses a stunning amount of control over its many disparate pieces: Bon Iver's monster-movie intro leads to a quick Rick Ross verse, and later, Nicki Minaj goes H.A.M. in her best bars to date. Here's hoping that, if G.O.O.D. Fridays continue past "Mercy," Yeezy produces another "Monster."


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Photos of the Week

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Monday, April 16, 2012

Nicki Minaj Talks World Tour, 'Roman Reloaded,' on 'Today' Show: Watch

by Khalila Douze, N.Y.  |   April 06, 2012 2:50 EDT

Early this morning (April 5), Nicki Minaj, decked in an a "black everything" 'fit,  stopped through "Today" to chat and perform a few hits from "Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded" (April 3).

Nicki Minaj's 25 Most Outrageous Outfits

Before performing the RedOne-produced track "Starships" and "Right By My Side," Minaj sat down to discuss Madonna, women of power, "Roman Reloaded," and touring.

The rapstress, who has worked with and spoken highly of Madonna, lists the legend as one of the inspirations behind her own evolution: "She's re-invented not only herself but pop culture... What inspires me about Madonna is that she's able to balance this, all of this, with her family and her personal life."

Nicki continued to share her views on women of power. "I feel like a lot of women in power, or successful women, as successful as they are they have that desire to still be loved, to still be always great, to still be approved. And it's like no matter how many times you tell them they're great, they don't believe it."

Before hitting the stage, Minaj touched on her sophomore full-length and upcoming worldwide tour. '"I don't get the jitters at all. Because this one, honestly, it's a better album. It's so much more well-rounded. It's way more songs. Everything is way more exciting on this album," Nicki said. "I'm about to start my world tour this year. My fans across seas have been going crazy. I'm just excited, more than anything, more than the album, eventually people are going to buy the album, but more than anything for me the fact this album is now  done and out of the way and I can go see my fans. I haven't been able to really touch and be one on one with them in a long time."

Nicki Minaj's 'Roman' Ready for No. 1 on Billboard 200

"Pink Friday: Roman Reloaded" is headed for No. 1 on the Billboard 200, and is expected to reach sales of 200,0000-250,00 copies by the end of its first week.


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Sunday, April 15, 2012

Rihanna, Lil Wayne Join Drake on 'Take Care,' 'HYFR' Videos

by David Greenwald, L.A.  |   April 06, 2012 8:55 EDT

Drake's "Take Care" video hit the web on Friday, finding the MC getting close with a rumored ex -- Rihanna, who's featured on the album title track.

While the minimalist video focuses on Drake and Rihanna singing and embracing, it's full of luxurious slow-motion photography of a number of animals and landscapes, include a fish, a bird and a dusty buffalo.

And just in time for Passover, Drizzy also released the less romantic video for "HYFR," featuring Lil Wayne. The video begins with vintage clips from the Jewish rapper's Bar Mitzvah, before showcasing temple-set footage of a purported recommitment ceremony that turns into a Young Money throwdown.

Watch the two videos below:


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Houston drowned in very hot water, cocaine in system

Whitney Houston performs during the World Music Awards at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada as a tribute to music mogul Clive Davis, who received the Outstanding Contribution to the Music Industry Award, in this September 15, 2004 file photo. REUTERS/Ethan Miller/Files

Whitney Houston performs during the World Music Awards at the Thomas & Mack Center in Las Vegas, Nevada as a tribute to music mogul Clive Davis, who received the Outstanding Contribution to the Music Industry Award, in this September 15, 2004 file photo.

Credit: Reuters/Ethan Miller/Files

LOS ANGELES | Thu Apr 5, 2012 2:21am EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Whitney Houston drowned in a hot bathtub in a Beverly Hills hotel room with cocaine in her system and white powder nearby, a final coroner's report revealed on Wednesday.

Detectives found white powdery substances, a rolled-up piece of paper, a small spoon and a mirror in the bathroom shortly after Houston's naked body was found face down in the bathtub on February 11, the 40-page Los Angeles County coroner's report said.

Houston, 48, had a history of drug addiction. An autopsy in March determined she died of accidental drowning due to the effects of cocaine and heart disease.

Wednesday's report revealed that Houston had a perforated nose, indicating substance abuse, filled with a bloody discharge.

Detectives said she was found in about 12 inches of extremely hot water, which was determined to be 93 Fahrenheit (34 Celsius) some six hours after her death.

The singer also had traces of marijuana in her system and an open bottle of champagne was found in her room at the Beverly Hilton, hours before she was due to attend a pre-Grammy party.

On a counter in the bathroom, detectives found "a small spoon with a crystal-like substance in it and a rolled up piece of white paper."

In a drawer, they found "a white powdery substance and a portable mirror on a base" together with more remnants of powder on the base of the mirror.

Wednesday's report did not identify the substance.

The "I Will Always Love You" singer appears to have been left alone in the hotel room for less than an hour. Houston had complained of a sore throat and her personal assistant advised the singer to have a bath to get ready for the party while she went to a nearby Neiman Marcus department store to pick up items for her appearance.

When the assistant returned, she found a naked Houston face down in the bathtub and unresponsive, according to the report.

Houston was one of the world's best known singers in the 1980s and 1990s with hits such as "Saving All My Love For You" and "I Wanna Dance with Somebody."

But her career declined during a tumultuous, drug-fueled 15-year marriage to singer Bobby Brown. She was last known to have entered drug rehabilitation in May 2011 but celebrity media reported that she was seen drinking heavily and behaving erratically in the three or four days before her death.

Houston's family said in statement last month that they were "saddened to have learned of the toxicology results" that revealed recent cocaine use, but were glad to have closure.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Sandra Maler, Paul Simao and Lisa Shumaker)


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Saturday, April 14, 2012

George Michael pens song about battle with illness

Singer George Michael performs at the Albert Hall in London October 25, 2011. REUTERS/Luke MacGregor

Singer George Michael performs at the Albert Hall in London October 25, 2011.

Credit: Reuters/Luke MacGregor

LONDON | Wed Apr 4, 2012 9:39am EDT

LONDON (Reuters) - George Michael is writing a song about his near-death battle with illness in a Vienna hospital last year, the British singer announced on Twitter on Wednesday.

Michael, 48, was diagnosed with severe pneumonia in November and treated in the Austrian capital where he was taken ill.

He was forced to postpone his tour and spent several weeks in hospital, describing his illness as "touch and go".

On his Twitter feed, he wrote: "I've been a busy boy in the studio this week ... finally ready to write about what happened to me in Vienna ... and how grateful I am to be given another chance to live and breathe alongside you all in this wonderful world that we share."

He added that he wanted to repay the "unending kindness" his fans had shown him with new music, and said he had begun to write the track which will be called "White Light".

The "Careless Whisper" star announced last month that he was back in good health and would re-start his postponed "Symphonica" tour in September.

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


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Friday, April 13, 2012

Country Hall Highlights Bakersfield Sound

There was something about the California sound of country music. It sparkled on the airwaves as much as the flamboyant stage attire that the artists who made the music wore on stage. For a while, it seemed like there was somewhat of a tug-of-war between the music scene there, and the one in Nashville.

However, the two worlds come together with the opening of The Bakersfield Sound: Buck Owens, Merle Haggard, and California Country, a new in-depth exhibit at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum in Music City. It takes a look at the history of the unique musical sounds that have taken place in the town once referred to as "Nashville West."

The exhibit begins by telling the story of families who moved west to California from places like Oklahoma, Texas, and Arkansas in the 1930s. For many, it was comparable to The Grapes Of Wrath. In most cases, they brought nothing but a few possessions and their dreams, many brought a love for country music with them.

Early pioneers that are featured include Speedy West, Merle Travis, Joe & Rose Lee Maphis, as well as Texas Playboys legend Bob Wills -- who had a weekly performance gig at Bakersfield's Beardsley Ballroom in the 1940s. Several of the early instruments used by some of these legends are on display at the Hall.

Also of note was the vibrant -- if not somewhat dangerous club scene in Bakersfield. Though the Beardsley burned to the ground in 1950, the area was filled with such night spots as the Rainbow Garden, the Lucky Spot, and, possibly the best-known of all the clubs in Bakersfield -- the Blackboard. It was there that people flocked to hear a style of music that had a little more spice, a little more kick than the sounds that were coming from anywhere else. It was country, for sure, but the twang factor was high and loud -- and infused with a rock and roll energy that was unlike anything else.

The most prominent musician at the Blackboard was area radio and TV personality Bill Woods. His band was one of the best known in the town, and included a hot-shot guitarist by the name of Alvis Edgar "Buck" Owens." Already developing a reputation as one of the top session players in Los Angeles, Owens was featured on sessions by such top acts as Tommy Collins.

Others included in the exhibit include Jean Shepard and Ferlin Husky -- whose "A Dear John Letter" was a major hit in 1953 -- though of interest to fans might be a 78 RPM of the original recording, between Fuzzy Owen and Bonnie Owens.

The Bakersfield Sound picks up steam in the late 1950s, with Owens becoming the ringleader of the musical movement. Starting with "Under Your Spell Again," the singer began a streak of successes that qualify as legendary, dominating the charts throughout the 1960s. Of course, attention is paid to the legacy of his backing band, the Buckaroos. Over the years, some of the musicians that played for Owens included steel players Ralph Mooney, Tom Brumley, and Jay Dee Maness, drummers Willie Cantu and Jerry Wiggins, bassist Doyle Holly, and "Dangerous" Don Rich.

Rich started playing for Owens while still a teenager, and developed into one of the greatest lead guitarists / fiddlers / harmony singers that the format has ever known. His Telecaster is on display, and in one of the more emotional inclusions in the exhibit -- a list of notes that Owens made before giving the eulogy at Rich's funeral in July 1974 -- following his death in a motorcycle crash.

While Owens was never the same musically following Rich's death, another former Buckaroo had picked up the baton and was running with it. Merle Haggard -- a native son of Kern County, and former resident of San Quentin -- shot to prominence in 1963 with "Sing A Sad Song," and had created a long line of classic recordings such as "Branded Man" and "Just Between The Two Of Us," a duet with Bonnie Owens -- Buck's ex-wife. The two were married from 1965-1978, and Bonnie sang harmony in Merle's band, the Strangers, for years thereafter. Many lyric transcriptions of Haggard classics are on display at the Hall, including "Today I Started Loving You Again." Also included is the 1972 document granting Haggard a full pardon -- signed by then-California governor Ronald Reagan!

Haggard is also featured on a video that plays throughout the exhibit featuring a conversation with the man who took over where Owens and Haggard left off in popularizing the Bakersfield sound, Dwight Yoakam. There is also some Yoakam-related memorabilia at the Hall, including many items from Yoakam's 1988 video with Owens, "Streets Of Bakersfield."

Walk through The Bakersfield Sound, and we think you will hear that musical legacy loud and clear. You will also see it -- up close and personal. The rhinestones still shine, and the instruments are all there in full view. If only they could talk.


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Ben Howard aims to conquer U.S. with "Every Kingdom"

By Piya Sinha-Roy

LOS ANGELES | Fri Apr 6, 2012 2:27pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - British folk singer Ben Howard admits he initially struggled with his entry onto the U.S. stage at last month's South by Southwest festival in Texas because the reception was overwhelmingly enthusiastic.

Howard whose new album "Every Kingdom" was released in the United States this week, is the latest in a wave of British singer-songwriters such as Adele and Mumford & Sons who are rising up record charts and being embraced by U.S. fans.

But the crowds at Howard's South by Southwest debut in Austin and in live, sold-out shows at New York's Bowery Ballroom have been mildly unsettling for the 24-year-old who grew up in the peaceful English countryside.

"Coming from the UK, you realize how quiet England is, and as soon as you get to America, it's really big and brash and loud out here, and South by Southwest was the epitome of that ... I struggled with it for a bit to be honest, it was quite a full-on experience," the singer admitted in an interview with Reuters.

Still, he has settled into a groove as he makes his way around the United States and "Every Kingdom" gains fans, much as Mumford & Sons, Adele and others did before him. And Howard credits acts such as those for paving the way for his own sound.

"Mumford & Sons have really opened up everyone's ears to music with instruments again, acoustic-based music ... it's reassuring for people like me who have been brought up on acoustic guitar," Howard said. "It's an exciting time for English music over here, there's so much great music coming out of the U.K. at the moment."

The singer cites a diverse range of musicians who inspired him, including singer-songwriters James Taylor and Joni Mitchell, rockers The Black Keys and Icelandic ambient band Sigur Ros.

Howard, who springs from the county of Devon on the Southwest coast of England, also said he drew inspiration from the rural landscapes of his home for the songs "Every Kingdom."

Living in the countryside gave him time and space to nurture creativity, and his personal life provided grist for the mill of his songwriting.

"Songs became little time periods of my life, little tales from certain periods, and you build these kingdoms and memories ... they're all little personal relationships and places that I've stored in my head," he said.

PERSONAL SONGS

"Every Kingdom" is a collection of melodic acoustic guitar tracks overlayed with Howard's unique soft voice on singles such as "Old Pine," "The Wolves" and "Keep Your Head Up."

But it is the hauntingly somber track "Black Flies" that Howard said is his personal favorite. It is often mistaken by the audience to be a heart-felt love song, while in fact it is a tale of friendship run afoul.

"We ended up doing separate things and going separate ways," said the singer. "That's what I write about most of the time, the people who come in and out of our lives and the memories that you form around them," said the singer.

Despite his initial nerves performing in front of U.S. crowds, Howard is eager to play live and prefers fans come and listen to him rather than interacting through social media, as so many artists are compelled to do in this digital age.

"I don't really like encouraging people to go on the Internet too much, we're constantly distracted with the Internet and computers ... all this Twitter and fan management kind of frustrates me," said the singer, who currently has 138,000 fans on Facebook and 61,000 on Twitter.

For his next, sophomore album, Howard said he is eager to "evolve" his sound to include more electronic guitars and possibly explore rock.

But he remains cautious about experimenting with genres such as electronica and hip hop, with which bands like Foo Fighters and Bon Iver have attempted to fuse with their sound recently.

"There's a lot of people who have murdered songs by putting crazy floor-on-the-floor beats ... Kanye West and Bon Iver did a track together and that was hideous, so I'm not going to go down that route just yet," said the singer.

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


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Carrie Underwood Enters Top 10 on Country Chart

by Wade Jessen, Nashville  |   April 06, 2012 6:30 EDT

Jake Owen claims a second week atop Country Songs with "Alone with You," which improves 688,000 audience impressions for a total of 37 million during the March 26-April 1 Nielsen BDS tracking week. Owen's previous single and first chart topper "Barefoot Blue Jean Night" spent the second of two straight weeks at No. 1 on the audience chart dated Sept. 24, 2011. On Country Digital Songs, "Alone" moves 35,000 downloads and ranks at No. 11 in its 20th chart week.

CHARTS: Country Songs | Country Albums

Elsewhere on Country Songs, Carrie Underwood scores her 15th top 10 with "Good Girl," which gains 1 million audience impressions and steps 11-10 in its sixth chart week. That matches Taylor Swift's tally in a back-and-forth race for the most top 10 singles (15) by a woman from the start of her career. Meanwhile, 'American Idol' contender Hollie Cavanaugh's March 28 performance of "Jesus Take the Wheel" pushes Underwood's original track to No. 1 on Christian Digital Songs (on Billboard.biz).

To find a song with fewer chart weeks than Underwood's "Girl" on Country Songs, you'd have to look down to No. 26, where Toby Keith's "Beers Ago" gains 3 million impressions and achieves a new peak from No. 38 in its 4th chart week. Also new to the top 10 is Jason Aldean's "Fly Over States," which rises 12-9 in its 14th chart week; it's the artist's 14th top 10, and bullets at No. 8 with 47,000 downloads in its seventh week on Country Digital Songs.

Our national formats/secondary markets radio reporters get a jump on the new duet by Tim McGraw and Kenny Chesney, titled "Feel Like a Rock Star," which dents the Country Indicator list at No. 54. The track was serviced to radio programmers during the artists' performance of the song during the April 1 Academy of Country Music Awards on CBS. The song will undoubtedly make a head-turning (if not historic) splash next week on the Country Songs list. The artists will launch a co-headlining summer tour in June. The Country Indicator list and your first look at the Country Songs chart happens each Monday night in the Billboard Country Update newsletter. Sign up for free here .

Lionel Richie appears for a second time on Country Albums, as duets set "Tuskegee" (Mercury/UMGN) opens atop the chart with 199,000 copies sold, good for a No. 2 start on the Billboard 200. That's the biggest opening week for a country album since Taylor Swift's "Speak Now" opened with more than one million copies in November 2010, however Scotty McCreery's "Clear as Day" began with 197,000 copies last fall. Richie's "Can't Slow Down" rose to No. 55 on Country Albums in 1984, driven by "Stuck on You," which peaked at No. 24 on Country Songs that year.


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Thursday, April 12, 2012

Jennifer Lopez's Sexed-Up 'Dance Again' Video: Watch

by Sarah Maloy, N.Y.  |   April 06, 2012 4:10 EDT

Jennifer Lopez's just-released video for "Dance Again" has body glitter, random choreographed dance numbers, poles and sex -- lots of sex. Oh and Pitbull's there too, hanging out on the sidelines while J.Lo gets dirty, dabbling in orgies and bondage.

The sexed-up video shows Lopez writhing in a pile of half-naked bodies and getting tied up with a "love is blind" blindfold by a shirtless man -- who just so happens to be her real-life love interest, Casper Smart. Watch as the on and off-screen pair get covered in body glitter and dance together, taking advantage of nearby stripper poles.

J-Lo's "Dance Again" video premiered Thursday night (April 6) on "American Idol," with an introduction by Ryan Seacrest in which the host asked Lopez if there was any special chemistry between her and the dancers. The too-hot-for-TV video certainly answered that question.


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Wednesday, April 11, 2012

Corey Harris on 'Meeting' Woody Guthrie, Working With Wilco & His New Film

by Gary Graff, Detroit  |   April 06, 2012 2:32 EDT

Corey Harris was an adjunct player in the "Mermaid Avenue" project helmed by Billy Bragg and Wilco. But with the "Mermaid Avenue: The Complete Sessions" box set arriving April 21, the roots music troubadour says he has fond memories of working on the collections of "new" Woody Guthrie songs.

"It was a great experience," Harris, who co-wrote "Hoodoo Voodoo" on 1998's "Mermaid Avenue" and played on the 2000 sequel, tells Billboard.com. "I got to meet Nora Guthrie, Woody's daughter, and talk to her about her dad. I got to be around Wilco and Billy Bragg... and see how they work, which was cool. We recorded some in Chicago and some in Ireland; being in Ireland was a cool experience, also."

Harris adds that watching Bragg and Wilco work was illuminating as well. "In a lot of rock and pop music, it seems to me they go into the studio and have an idea, roughly, of what they want to do and then they start to write a song," he explains. "Whereas the way I like to do things and the way it's done in the blues is you have a song together... so you're recording something you're really comfortable with and have been playing for a long time, not getting into the studio and writing material. So it was interesting to see how they do things."

Harris adds that, "I'd be lying if I said I felt Woody's spirit" during the "Mermaid Avenue" sessions. "It would look great on paper, but, no I can't say I felt his spirit. I didn't really know much about Woody Guthrie... so it was more about me getting to know him because I met his daughter and got to see his lyrics, which were photocopies of his handwritten lyrics from the archives in New York. So I felt like I was collaborating with someone but at the same time I was just meeting him, too."

Harris is busy these days with his own music, promoting his 2011 album "Father Sun, Mother Earth" with his Rasta Blues Experience band. He also filmed a documentary about his life and career on March 17, when he played a pair of shows at Callahan's Music Hall in suburban Detroit, which was filmed by the American Music Research Foundation.

"It'll be about my music and how I put together what I do, and talking about the people I've worked with. It'll cover the gamut," says Harris, who also appeared in Martin Scorsese's 2003 PBS miniseries "The Blues." "I look at it like this; I produce a product, and I want people to know what I'm producing. I want people to know my message, and opportunities like this allow me to get my message out... and tell people to hold to your roots, to hold to your traditions, and by doing that you can chart a course for the future."


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Tuesday, April 10, 2012

LoveRance, Rep Talk Success of 'Up!' & Interscope Signing

UP!," the debut single from 24-year-old rapper LoveRance, first floated into the upper reaches of Billboard's Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs chart as an independent release last June. Propelled by a grass-roots marketing campaign-the Bay Area native born Rance Oliver posted the song on Facebook and "walked around just giving out tapes with just that song," he says-and with fellow unknowns Skipper and the song's producer IamSu! onboard, "UP!" entered the chart at No. 96 before drifting as high as No. 70 during its initial 19-week run. By Oct. 29, "UP!" had dropped back to No. 95, then fell off the chart.

Chart Juice: LoveRance Rises 'UP!' to Top 10

But on Feb. 4 "UP!" returned to Hot R&B/Hip-Hop Songs where, buoyed by a new 50 Cent verse and backed by Interscope, which signed LoveRance in September, the track has found new life. This week the raunchy anthem rises 9-7 and continues to build.

The song's success has been a victory not just for LoveRance but also Interscope executive VP of A&R Larry Jackson. "It's been a mission of mine to find a song from my hometown, San Francisco, that I can nurture and help chart into success," says Jackson, who first heard the track on KMEL San Francisco in July. (KMEL music director Big Von broke the record after the station's DJ Amen passed it along.)

On Sept. 30, Jackson met with LoveRance and Interscope Geffen A&M chairman Jimmy Iovine and, according to those involved, LoveRance signed his deal with Interscope the same day. "Jimmy and I loved the song and loved everything he played for us," Jackson says. "We decided at that point, that day, to sign him."

Once the ink dried, Jackson contacted 50 Cent about a potential collaboration. "[In] early November, I asked 50 Cent if he had heard his record," Jackson recalls. "He said, 'Yeah, I know that record. I almost signed him [after] Von brought it to me.' I said, 'I'm working with them; they're from my hood. I think you should hop on the record.' He said yes and a week later he had the verse finished."

Interscope went to radio with "UP!" featuring 50 Cent. Two months later, the song was back on the charts.

With his name on the rise, LoveRance is readying his mixtape, "Happy Fuckin' Birthday," which he plans to release later this month. As for his next single? He plans to let fans' feedback on Facebook and Twitter drive that.

"I'm going to let them tell me what they like after they listen to the mixtape," says LoveRance. "I want to give them what they want."

Additional reporting by Karinah Santiago.


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Track Review: Big K.R.I.T., 'I Got This'

by Jon Blistein  |   April 07, 2012 10:00 EDT

BIG K.R.I.T.
"I Got This" (3:24)
Producer: Big K.R.I.T.
Writers: J. Scott, W. Hutch
Publisher: Sippi Land Publishing (BMI), Jobete Music, OPC Music Publishing (ASCAP)
Def Jam

Behind the boards, Big K.R.I.T. continues to astound. His self-produced new track, "I Got This" -- which may appear on his long-awaited Def Jam debut, "Live From the Underground" -- starts with the jittery click of a guitar pick against strings, but with the bend of a bass note it morphs into a classic Southern rap symphony, complete with relentless high-hat ticks, rattling snares and the stickiest synth line this side of G-funk. K.R.I.T. sounds as nimble as ever on the mic by showcasing the versatility of his Southern drawl: The MC can let his voice glide before instantly throwing his flow into high gear and piling syllables on top of each other. The overall subject matter of "I Got This" isn't groundbreaking or even insightful, but K.R.I.T.'s skill is so impressive that by the time he's whispering "I got this here" during the bridge, it's hard not to believe him.

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Beyonce shares family photos on new fan website

Singer Beyonce poses at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles August 28, 2011. Beyonce and her husband, rapper Jay-Z, will welcome their first child next spring. REUTERS/Danny Moloshok

Singer Beyonce poses at the 2011 MTV Video Music Awards in Los Angeles August 28, 2011. Beyonce and her husband, rapper Jay-Z, will welcome their first child next spring.

Credit: Reuters/Danny Moloshok

LOS ANGELES | Thu Apr 5, 2012 3:10pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - R&B superstar Beyonce gave fans some insight into her private life on Thursday with the relaunch of her website, featuring intimate snapshots of her daily routines the singer has carefully shielded from the public until now.

"This is my life, today, over the years - through my eyes. My family, my travels, my love. This is where I share with you. This will continue to grow as I do," the singer wrote on her new website.

Beyonce.com features a montage of candid shots from the singer's personal life including pictures of her on holiday, with her husband, rapper Jay-Z, and family and during her pregnancy.

One 15-second video shows the singer posing by a blue ivy tree during while pregnant, which perhaps provided the inspiration for her newborn daughter's name, Blue Ivy Carter.

"It's been a long time coming, but I finally have my own place on the web," the singer posted on her Facebook page, where she has 34 million fans.

Beyonce also took the opportunity of launching her new site to tweet her 3.5 million Twitter fans for first time.

The "Single Ladies" singer has kept her private life under wraps in the past, including getting married to Jay-Z in a shroud of secrecy in April 2008 and waiting five months after the event to debut her wedding ring.

But Beyonce, 30 and Jay-Z, 42, who were estimated to be worth $72 million by Forbes in 2011, have been slowly lifting the veil on their luxury life.

The couple released intimate pictures of Blue Ivy through social networking site Tumblr in February, shunning the popular celebrity choice of a lucrative magazine deal.

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


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Monday, April 9, 2012

Train Tries To Follow A Massive Hit - Again - on 'California 37'

In 2009, the members of Train thought the band might have run out of road. Its third album, "For Me, It's You," released by Columbia in 2006, had failed to live up to expectations. Its breakout, multiplatinum debut, "Drops of Jupiter," was eight years in the rearview, and the success of the San Francisco act's 2003 follow-up, "My Private Nation," was quickly fading from sight. Despite sneaking into the top 10 of the Billboard 200 in its first week (at No. 10), "For Me, It's You" didn't deliver a Hot 100 hit -- a huge blow for a band with a track record for smash singles and the hardware to show for it.

In the wake of the stalled release, singer Pat Monahan says the band was left wondering if its next album would be its last. But rather than junking the whole operation, Train decided to strip down, reboot and give the group one last go. Step one: a corporate-like housecleaning that included massive layoffs, "business-wise and onstage," as Monahan puts it, leaving just the original trio -- Monahan, guitarist Jimmy Stafford and drummer Scott Underwood onboard.

As it turned out, the move worked. Armed with some demos that would later become the band's 2009 comeback album, "Save Me San Francisco" -- which yielded the hit single "Hey, Soul Sister," the second-best-selling digital song of 2010 (4.3 million copies, according to Nielsen SoundScan) - - the band rebuilt its crew. The most important new hire: Train brought Crush Management onboard, a company that was having success with acts like Gym Class Heroes and Cobra Starship. Monahan credits Crush -- and specifically band manager Jonathan Daniel -- with reviving Train's fan base.

"What are the chances that Train, the band that disappeared for however long from people's lives, could come back and have a song that outsells everything else in 2010?" Monahan asks while sitting in his hotel room in New York, where the band is prepping for its appearance on "Late Show With David Letterman." "Who would have ever made that gamble? Anybody? No."

Train's Pat Monahan Talks 'Drive By,' Following Up 'Hey Soul Sister'

But Daniel and Crush not only made the gamble, they won the hand. "Save Me San Francisco peaked" at No. 17 on the Billboard 200; has sold 954,000 copies, according to SoundScan; and spawned three top 40 singles and four adult top 40/triple A hits -- including "Hey, Soul Sister," a five-times-platinum track that won the 2010 Grammy Award for best pop performance by a duo or group with vocals and peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard Hot 100. The success of the album sent Train on the road right up until the end of 2011 -32 months total, counting a three-month tour preceding the album's release. Finally, the group headed into the studio to record its sixth album, "California 37."

"My dad always said, 'If you have something important you want done, give it to the busiest person,'" Monahan says. "And it makes sense, because if you're busy and you're in the heat of the moment that you're meant to be in, then just keep throwing things into the whirlwind and they'll get resolved. A lot of times when you have downtime, you tend to overthink things. Like, 'Let's listen to the radio, what do we want to do?' Instead of, 'We are part of the radio, let's just do what we do.' That's a way better way to go about it."

Almost all of "California 37," due April 17 on Columbia, was penned while Train trekked around the world in support of "Save Me San Francisco." On days off, Monahan would fly to New York to work on new music, often collaborating with Norwegian songwriting/production duo Espionage -- Espen Lind and Amund Bjørklund -- who had helped write "Hey, Soul Sister." After touring wrapped in Asia last November, Train's members spent a few days at home for Thanksgiving, then flew to Los Angeles to record with producer Butch Walker at his Venice, Calif., studio. And though one would expect plenty of pressure to follow up the popularity of the previous album, Monahan says there wasn't any sense of anxiety.

"In the past we've lied and said, 'No, it wasn't much pressure,'" he says. "Or at least we tried to make light of the pressure. And in hindsight, maybe we were telling the truth. But when you look back at it, there was a lot of pressure -- mostly our own pressure. What I realized was, we longed for success so badly because we didn't enjoy the process. When you don't enjoy the process of something, the only reward is success - - monetary or radio or fame or whatever. So when we were working on this record there was really no pressure, because we're loving our time together."

The band's business team, Daniel says, was likewise unconcerned about Train's ability to deliver another batch of potential singles. "Writing a hit song is one thing, but writing a song that's a hit for years, like 'Drops of Jupiter' or 'Soul Sister,' is really rare," Daniel says. "And doing it multiple times is really, really rare." So both the label and management are focused on using the momentum from Save Me San Francisco to propel the new album forward.

The quick release of the album was intentional. "We wanted to turn it around relatively quickly, without compromising the music," Daniel says, "to capitalize on the success of the last album." The label promoted the album's first single, "Drive By," to radio in mid-January. That single, which was followed by a music video on Feb. 15, has already gone gold, according to the RIAA - - weeks before "California 37's" release.

Propelled by buoyant acoustic riffs and a hook-laden melody that combines Monahan's sing-talk vocal croon with soaring choruses, "Drive By" is of a pop-rock style similar to "Hey, Soul Sister." For radio programmers, the number was an immediate yes.

"I began playing Train in the very beginning, starting with 'Meet Virginia,' and everything since then was a no-brainer for the format," says Charese Fruge, PD for CBS Radio stations KEGY San Diego and Las Vegas' KMXB and KXTE. "Drive By" had "an instant hook. Train is core for the audience, so it rose to power [rotation] quickly on KMXB and it's still there. The songs are melodic, sexy, sarcastic and incorporate pop culture, which makes it so relatable to the fans. Not to mention they nail everything live."

Columbia had spent five months promoting "Hey, Soul Sister" before it took off, aided in part by a placement on "CSI: New York," Daniel recalls. But this time out, coming off an album that's approaching platinum and that spawned four airplay hits, convincing fans and radio programmers to reboard the Train is a lot easier. "People remember they like Train now," Daniel says. "Sometimes when a band has been around for a long time, you've got to remind them."

Since "CSI: New York" was instrumental in the popularity of "Hey, Soul Sister," the label and band are even more prepared to use TV to promote the new album -- and they're doing it earlier this time, and with more tracks.

Columbia Records Creative Agency senior director Brian Nolan fostered a partnership between Train and ESPN, which is using album cut "This'll Be My Year" during its "MLB Opening Night" spots. The band will also spend a week as the house band on "The Rachael Ray Show," performing two tracks per day for five days, and the group recently appeared on the CW's "90210," where it performed "Drive By" and "Hey, Soul Sister."

In addition, Train will launch a third line of wine under its wine label, which consists of a petite sirah called Drops of Jupiter and chardonnay Calling All Angels. The new line, a cabernet named California 37, will debut around the same time as the album. Later, when Train heads out on its U.S. summer tour in July, fans will be able to taste the band's upcoming partnership with Bay Area chocolatier Ghirardelli, which will involve three types of branded Train chocolate.

Rock N' Roll Wines: The Billboard Tasting

"There was a day, when we started making records, when partnering with a brand other than yourself was taboo," Monahan says. "It turned you from cool to fool really quick. [But now] if you can attach it to something that's decent, it's an amazing opportunity."

But mainly, if you're only just now getting "Hey, Soul Sister" unstuck from your head, 2012 will only bring more Train singles to take its place. More than one, if the band has its way.

"If we were going to be able to do five or six singles from an album," Monahan says, "this is the one."


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Justin Bieber makes highest Billboard debut with "Boyfriend"

Singer Justin Bieber speaks at a ceremony where Michael Jackson's shoes and gloves are used to make hand and foot imprints in cement in the courtyard of Hollywood's Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles on January 26, 2012. REUTERS/Phil McCarten

Singer Justin Bieber speaks at a ceremony where Michael Jackson's shoes and gloves are used to make hand and foot imprints in cement in the courtyard of Hollywood's Grauman's Chinese Theatre in Los Angeles on January 26, 2012.

Credit: Reuters/Phil McCarten

By Piya Sinha-Roy

LOS ANGELES | Wed Apr 4, 2012 3:29pm EDT

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Canadian pop phenomenon Justin Bieber made his highest single debut on Wednesday with new track "Boyfriend," debuting at No. 2 on the Billboard Hot 100 singles chart.

More than 559,000 copies were sold of "Boyfriend" in its first week.

Despite the singer's popularity -- 41 million fans on Facebook and 19 million on Twitter -- this is only the third time Bieber has managed to break into the Hot 100 top ten. Previous hit, "Never Say Never" made it to No. 8 last year, and "Baby" notched No. 5 in 2010.

"Boyfriend" sees the 18-year-old singer take a more mature direction with his music, making a transition from catchy pop tunes to heavy R&B beats as Bieber displays his rapping talents.

The track was played 3,961 times on U.S. radio in its first week, an average of 31 plays on each station, making "Boyfriend" the best first-week plays for a song by a male artist in Billboard's Pop Songs chart history.

Bieber was unable to beat chart-toppers fun., who held the Hot 100 No. 1 again with their single "We Are Young," featuring Janelle Monae, which sold 363,000 digital copies last week.

Despite Bieber's song selling more copies than "We Are Young", "Boyfriend" ranked lower on the Hot 100, which measures sales, airplay and on-demand songs from streaming services such as Spotify.

"Boyfriend" was available only on iTunes in its first week, while "We Are Young" was available to stream and purchase from all digital retailers.

Elsewhere on the Hot 100 singles chart, Gotye's quirky break-up song "Somebody That I Used To Know" featuring Kimbra climbed to No. 3, while British boy band The Wanted dropped to No. 4 with their dance anthem "Glad You Came."

Fellow Brits One Direction also entered the top ten with their pop track "What Makes You Beautiful," at No. 9, fueled by the band's recent promotional tour in the U.S.

"American Idol" alum Kelly Clarkson rounded out the top five with the dance-pop track "Stronger."

(Reporting By Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Jill Serjeant)


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Sunday, April 8, 2012

Missy Elliott and Timbaland Debut New Song in NYC

by Khalila Douze, N.Y.  |   April 06, 2012 1:20 EDT

Last night (April 5), Missy Elliott and Timbaland reunited on stage to perform a new song at Hennessey's 'White Rabbit' campaign launch event in NYC. The untitled cut samples lyrics from Run D.M.C.'s "Here We Go (Live at the Funhouse)," according to HipHopDX.

After being introduced by Erykah Badu, Timbaland hyped up the crowd with songs such as Nelly Furtado's "Promiscuous Girl" and Justin Timberlake's "Sexyback." Minutes later, Missy Elliott hit the stage decked in bedazzled Jeremy Scott Adidas gear. A signature look of Missy's. French dancers, Les Twins, performed alongside Missy when performing "Get Your Freak On" and "Work It."

Timbo closed his set with the sounds of Aaliyah and Jay-Z after Missy stepped off the stage. Badu followed suit. The singer closed the night with classics including, "Love of My Life," On and On," and more.

Last month (March 2011), Timbaland teased a new track, featuring Missy Elliott, during the Breeding Ground showcase at this year's SXSW festival. Timbo's untitled album, due this year, also features guest spots by Lil Wayne, T-Pain, Rick Ross and more.


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Monica Has a Fresh Start on RCA With 'New Life'

by Keith Murphy  |   April 07, 2012 10:00 EDT

"I always wanted to have that 'Waiting to Exhale' moment," veteran R&B songstress Monica says. Specifically, she's referring to the giddy experience of blowing up a car on the set of the video for her current single, "It All Belongs to Me." The Rico Love-produced song -- a delicately sneering duet with longtime contemporary Brandy, which finds the pair uniting to kick out a philandering man -- would've been right at home playing during the credits of the 1995 romantic film.

The event track is a reunion for the former rivals, who earned record-breaking global acclaim in 1998 with their Grammy Award-winning No. 1 collaboration, "The Boy Is Mine." But despite the jilted-lover's revenge fantasy, Monica insists that her latest album, "New Life," is fueled by a less high-drama inspiration.

"Love happened," Monica says of "New Life's" optimistic theme, a reference to her recent marriage to NBA player Shannon Brown. "I was comfortable with spending time by myself and just enjoying my two sons. I assumed it would be that way for a long time. But I pretty much allowed God's will to be done and not try to control everything for a change. And that's when I met my husband. This album represents some of the best things that have happened to me in my life."

Brandy and Monica Debut 'It All Belongs to Me' Video: Watch

Monica Denise Brown's seventh studio project, due April 10, represents her first RCA Music Group release, following the 2011 disbandment of longtime label home Arista. The Georgia native with the big church-baptized pipes first appeared as a sassy 13-year-old "it" girl on her 1995 debut, "Miss Thang" (No. 7 on Billboard's Top R&B/Hip-Hop Albums chart). That platinum work, according to Nielsen SoundScan (1.5 million copies), kicked off a 15-year run on the charts.

"When you grow up singing songs like 'God Is a Good God' and 'Going Up Yonder' you have to have some real power behind your voice," Monica says of her longevity. "There are no gimmicks."

Indeed, "New Life " -- executive-produced by Monica's first cousin Polow Da Don ( Fergie, Rihanna, Keri Hilson) -- is heavy on the heartfelt vocals and bare-boned testimonies. The set features a headlining roster of collaborators that includes Brandy, Wale, Missy Elliott and Jermaine Dupri. But it's the underground promotional single "Anything (To Find You)," a soulful cut that features Rick Ross over a sample of the Notorious B.I.G.'s menacing "Who Shot Ya," that Monica says comes closest to her "Miss Thang" days -- a period when her fresh-faced career was guided by future music mogul Dallas Austin.

"The '90s is where I learned how to drop my vocals over hip-hop beats," she recalls. "My very first single, 'Just One of Those Days,' a song produced by Dallas, was done over LL Cool J's 'Backseat of My Jeep.'"

RCA Records senior VP of urban marketing Carolyn Williams says that in addition to a heavy online presence (which already includes fan-aimed contests on Twitter and Facebook), Monica will hit various media platforms to promote the album. "She is going to be on ABC's 'Good Morning America' and 'Live With Kelly,' and there will be an AOL Sessions."

Monica hopes to tour later this year with Brandy, a tentative joint effort that she says should've happened 14 years ago. "Neither one of us has been out there on the road for a good while," Monica says. "Doing the promotional work for 'It All Belongs to Me' has been fun and uplifting, to work with another woman that's been through similar things that I have . . . There's still a lot to be done."


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Saturday, April 7, 2012

'Glee' Creator to Helm 'Dirty Dancing' Reboot

by Sarah Maloy, N.Y.  |   April 06, 2012 5:30 EDT

Brad Falchuk, co-creator of "Glee," has been tapped to rewrite the screenplay for a remake of 1987's "Dirty Dancing," Variety reports. The reimagined musical will feature classic '60s music and songs from the original film in addition to new tracks.

Lionsgate has scheduled the new "Dirty Dancing" for a July 26, 2013 release. The original film, which starred Patrick Swayze and Jennifer Grey, grossed just under $64 million domestically and $214 million worldwide.

It also produced not one, but two soundtracks, the first of which spent 18 weeks at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 chart in 1987-88. The subsequent soundtrack, "More Dirty Dancing," peaked at No. 3 for five weeks in the spring of 1988.

As was announced in August, the original "Dirty Dancing" choreographer, Kenny Ortega, will direct and produce in conjunction with Debra Martin Chase ("The Princess Diaries") and the film's original writer/producer, Eleanor Bergstein. Ortega was also the director of Michael Jackson's "This Is It" and the "High School Musical" series.

Falchuk recently co-created "American Horror Story," an award-winning television drama for FX, with "Glee" cohort Ryan Murphy.


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