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    DaBaby Reacts to Backlash Following Bizarre JoJo Siwa Diss in New Song

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    Following DaBaby’s clarification of the name-drop of the former child star, some Internet users jump to the ‘Masterpiece’ spitter’s defense as one writes in an Instagram comment, ‘Y’all just don’t understand his word play.’

    Feb 22, 2021
    AceShowbiz – DaBaby released a new freestyle on Saturday, February 20 and he successfully confused fans as he appeared to diss former child star JoJo Siwa. Titled “Beatbox Freestyle”, the song saw the “ROCKSTAR” spitter taking aim at the 17-year-old YouTube star.
    “Turn me up, n***a gon’ see why/ N***a, you a b***h, JoJo Siwa (B***h),” so he rapped in his version of Spotem Gottem’s “Beatbox”. While the rhyme matched perfectly, fans couldn’t help but criticize DaBaby for the name-drop as blogger Perez Hilton wrote on Twitter, “DaBaby is disrespecting our queen #JoJoSiwa! Oh, hell no!!!.”
    A fan of the “Dance Moms” alum chimed in, “what kind of beef could DaBaby possibly have with JoJo Siwa.” Someone else added, “Out of all the people on the INTERNET… jojo siwa…. girl wut?”
    DaBaby apparently caught wind of the backlash and responded in a tweet. ” I love Twitter bruh,” so the rapper wrote alongside several laughing and crying emojis. “I ‘Siwa’ I’m not like the rest of you n****s.”

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    In a follow-up tweet, DaBaby revealed that he had no hard feelings for the former child star and it was all love for her. “@itsjojosiwa my 3 year old princess is your number 1 fan. I bought her every product you have out. She think she you,” he wrote on the blue bird app. “Don’t let em trick you into thinking id ever have a problem with you. My word play just went over their heads. All love on my end shawty, Keep shinning!”

    The hip-hop star continued to poke fun at his own word play as he added in a separate tweet, “I don’t ‘Siwa’ they so mad either bae.”
    Following the clarification, some Internet users jumped to DaBaby’s defense. “Y’all just don’t understand his word play,” one noted in an Instagram comment. “IT’S SAD THAT ARTIST HAVE TO EVEN EXPLAIN THEMSELVES. MY GOSH,” another fan added. “Y’all definitely stretched it. The word play was obvious,” someone chimed in.
    JoJo, meanwhile, has yet to comment on the name-drop.

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    New York’s Pop-Up Concerts Kick Off With Jazz at a Vaccination Site

    #masthead-section-label, #masthead-bar-one { display: none }At HomeBake: Maximalist BrowniesListen: To Pink SweatsGrow: RosesUnwind: With Ambience VideosAdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyNew York’s Pop-Up Concerts Kick Off With Jazz at a Vaccination SiteThe musician Jon Batiste led a band through the Javits Center to begin half a year of unannounced performances throughout the state.Jon Batiste (center) and his band Stay Human march through the Javits Center during the first NY PopsUp event on Saturday.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesFeb. 21, 2021It seemed at first like a small, no-frills concert in a carefully controlled environment: The jazz musician Jon Batiste sitting at a piano in an auditorium at the Javits Center on Manhattan’s West Side, performing for an audience of about 50 health care workers seated in evenly spaced rows — some wearing scrubs, others Army fatigues.The dancer Ayodele Casel began tapping, with no musical accompaniment except a recording of her own voice, her amplified cramp rolls filling the room. And the opera singer Anthony Roth Costanzo performed “Ave Maria” in a countertenor’s angelic tones.Ayodele Casel tapping.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesAnd an appreciative audience of health care workers.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesBatiste on melodica as the indoor parade passes by.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesBut about half an hour in, the performers stepped off the stage and exited the room, turning what had begun as a formal concert into a rollicking procession of music and dancing that grooved through the sterile building — the convention center was turned into a field hospital early in the pandemic and is now a mass vaccination site — where hundreds of hopeful people had come on Saturday afternoon to get their shots.Batiste switched to the melodica, a toylike, hand-held reed instrument with a keyboard, and the troupe of musicians — which had expanded to include a horn section and percussionists — paraded up the escalator and through the convention center, eventually reaching a high-ceilinged room where dozens of people sat waiting quietly for the requisite 15 minutes after getting their vaccinations.This concert-turned-roaming-party was the first in a series of “pop-up” shows in New York intended to give the arts a jolt by providing artists with paid work and audiences with opportunities to see live performance after nearly a year of darkened theaters and concert halls. Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo announced plans for the series, called “NY PopsUp,” last month, declaring that “we must bring arts and culture back to life,” and adding that their revival would be crucial to the economic revival of New York City. The shows are getting underway as he finds himself under fire for the state’s handling of Covid-19 deaths of nursing home residents.Health care workers and vaccine recipients provided and audience for the surprise concert on Saturday at the Javits Center, the first of a series called NY PopsUp.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesBatiste, getting serious.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesThe band, appropriately masked, propels itself through the center on Saturday.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesBecause the program is wary of drawing crowds, most of the performances will be unannounced, emerging suddenly at parks, museums, parking lots and street corners. The idea is to inject a dose of inspiration into the lives of New Yorkers — a moment in which they can pause their scheduled lives and witness art during a pandemic year that has limited human contact and imposed tight restrictions on people’s activities.“We need more spontaneity; that’s what the beauty of this is,” Batiste said in an interview. “You don’t know what’s around the corner.”As the troupe of musicians moved through the Javits Center, the audience of health care workers followed them, clapping to the beat and recording the spectacle on their phones. Batiste, who is the bandleader on “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,” propelled his musicians through the space (most of them have played with the show’s house band, including Endea Owens on bass, Tivon Pennicott on saxophone, and Joe Saylor and Nêgah Santos on percussion).Bre Williams, a 35-year-old nurse in blue scrubs who had come from Savannah, Ga., to help out in New York, looked on wide-eyed.“Y’all do this stuff all the time up here?” she said, laughing.Shortly before the music ended, some of the health care workers rushed off to continue their work day (this concert was happening during their break time, after all).The series is put on by a public-private partnership led by the producers Scott Rudin and Jane Rosenthal, along with the New York State Council on the Arts and Empire State Development. Zack Winokur, the director and interdisciplinary artist in charge of the programming, said the group is aiming to put on more than 300 pop-up performances through Labor Day, in every borough and around the state. The performers are chosen by a council of artists — among them Batiste, Casel and Costanzo — who are each asked to tap into their own networks to find participants.“It’s been a long time since I’ve seen a live performance,” Winokur said in an interview. “It’s a profoundly needed experience right now.”A pop-up parade with free drinks from a coffee truck.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesOnlookers, some appreciative, peeked out of doorways and windows. At one point, however, objects were hurled at the musicians from an upper-story window.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesThe NY PopsUp parade takes over a lane in Brooklyn.Credit…Nina Westervelt for The New York TimesAfter the first performance at the Javits Center, the musicians headed to Brooklyn, where they began another flash-mob-style street jam, starting from Cadman Plaza Park and winding their way through Dumbo to end up at a skatepark, where teenagers stared at them curiously before hopping back on their skateboards. The free, mobile concerts are called “love riots” by Batiste, who has previously planned them on social media. This one traveled along sidewalks and slushy snow, sometimes slowing traffic.Prevented from tap dancing on the street, Casel banged out rhythms by clapping the metal plates on her tap shoes together with her hands; Costanzo danced along with the band and at one point grabbed the megaphone to sing “Somewhere Over the Rainbow.”While the music was intended to provide a spontaneous display for passers-by, the march itself was as tightly regulated as any pandemic-era event. Security personnel directed members of the musical entourage around uneven terrain and dog waste. Another employee asked onlookers to spread out when they started to break social distancing guidelines.Despite the logistics that went into it, the plan succeeded in being a spontaneous curiosity for the dozens of people who unexpectedly encountered the music. Moving down narrow alleyways and commercial streets, the band caused people to stop, stare and sometimes groove a little bit. Children peered through windows along Washington Street; a doorman darted out of an apartment building to see what all the noise was about; pharmacy employees leaned out of the doorway to film the procession down the sidewalk.Not everyone seemed to appreciate the music, though. At one point, someone inside an apartment building began throwing objects at the marchers from several floors up (one of the security staffers said he thought he saw an orange juice container and a trophy hit the snow).Accustomed to improvising, the band simply dodged the flying objects and marched a bit more quickly, the music never stopping.AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Fela Kuti Takes Early Lead as Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Voting Begins

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    The late Nigerian musical icon has become a frontrunner to be one of the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees as the public voting for Class of 2021 has begun.

    Feb 21, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Late Afrobeat legend Fela Kuti has emerged as a front-runner for induction into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame a week after voting for the Class of 2021 began.
    The Nigerian superstar has scored 140,000 fan votes, according to Rock Hall officials – 30,000 more than Tina Turner in second place and 60,000 more than third-placed Foo Fighters.
    The official 2021 Rock Hall class will be announced in May.
    Iron Maiden, Mary J. Blige, and Jay-Z are also among the artists in consideration for induction.

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    Announced earlier this month, the list has 16 nominees that also include the likes of Dionne Warwick, LL Cool J, the Go-Go’s, Carole King, Kate Bush, Devo, Chaka Khan, Todd Rundgren, the New York Dolls, and Rage Against the Machine.
    “This remarkable ballot reflects the diversity and depth of the artists and music the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame celebrates” said John Sykes, the chairman of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Foundation in a press release obtained People. “These Nominees have left an indelible impact on the sonic landscape of the world and influenced countless artists that have followed them.”
    Music fans can cast their votes for their favourite stars beginning Wednesday through 30 April, on the Rock Halls website.
    Meanwhile, Ohio music lovers can also vote in-person at The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Museum.
    The Hall is still hoping that the COVID situation will improve to allow for a live induction ceremony in the fall, after last year’s class had to settle for a taped HBO special.

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    HAIM Re-Release Third Album With Taylor Swift Collaboration

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    Danielle, Este and Alana Haim announce they include collaborations with the ‘Evermore’ singer and Thundercat in the extended version of their latest album ‘Women In Music Pt. III.’

    Feb 21, 2021
    AceShowbiz – HAIM have released their expanded edition of “Women In Music Pt. III” featuring Taylor Swift and Thundercat.
    After the “Want You Back” group teased fans about Taylor Swift’s appearance on their new version of “Gasoline”, Haim has the extended LP with their remix featuring their close pal, who told them the track was her favourite on the 2020 record.
    The expanded album also features Los Angeles musician Thundercat on a new cut of “3 AM”.
    On how Taylor and Thundercat came to feature on the tracks, Haim – comprising sisters Danielle, Este and Alana Haim – explained on Instagram, “gasoline (feat. taylor swift) + 3 am (feat. thundercat) out now!! since we released wimpiii in june, taylor had always told us that gasoline was her favorite. so when we were thinking about ways to reimagine some of the tracks from the record, we immediately thought of her. she brought such amazing ideas and new imagery to the song and truly gave it a new life. thank you @taylorswift for adding your incredible voice and spirit to a track that means so much to us.”

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    They also added thanks to pal Thundercat, who “hopped on the song and put his magical twist on it.”
    Eagle-eyed Swifties had spotted the collaboration was registered with ASCAP (American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers), and the trio also shared a snippet of the new version “Gasoline”, which features backing vocals by the cardigan hitmaker on TikTok.
    The siblings posted a clip of them driving in a car with the song blasting on the stereo and captioned it, “Uh oh.”
    The pop group had directed fans to TikTok with a tweet which read, “Tik tok tik tok tik tok (sic).”
    Haim recently teamed up with the 31-year-old Grammy-winner on the track “No Body, No Crime” on her album “Evermore”.

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    Carrie Underwood to Join Cece Winans' Livestream, Madison Beer to Headline Her Own Virtual Gig

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    The ‘Jesus, Take the Wheel’ hitmaker is set to make a special appearance at ‘An Evening of Thanksgiving’ while the ‘Life Support’ singer will sing her entire album at her own online concert.

    Feb 21, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Carrie Underwood is to make a special appearance on gospel singer Cece Winans’ upcoming “An Evening of Thanksgiving” livestream concert this Sunday (21Feb21).
    The country singer, who features on Winans’ upcoming gospel album “My Saviour”, will perform “Great Is Thy Faithfulness” on the evening, and told fans she’s more than a little excited about the gig.
    “I’m looking forward to being a part of CeCe’s night of Thanksgiving and so happy she asked me to be a part of it,” she said in a video announcing her participation in the concert. “Hope you’ll join us on February 21st!”
    Winans will also be joined virtually by Tauren Wells and her brother Marvin Winans.
    For tickets to the livestream, which kicks off at 7pm CST, visit: eventbrite.com.

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    In another news, Madison Beer will perform tracks from her debut album “Life Support” during a global streaming experience on 7 March (21).
    According to a press release, the pop star will “capture her coming-of-age storytelling through a stunning visual narrative” and will perform her record in its entirety before taking part in an interactive panel conversation with fans.
    “I can’t wait to perform my entire album for you. i hope to see you there,” she wrote on Instagram.
    There will be four airings of the concert depending on timezone – at 8pm ET and 8pm PT on 6 March, and 8pm AEDT and 8pm GMT on 7 March.
    For tickets, visit: ticketmasterpartners.com.

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    Nick Cave and His Band Offer Over 100 Prizes to Raise Funds for Tour Crew Amid Covid-19 Pandemic

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    Nick and the Bad Seeds have launched an online fundraiser to help support their tour crew, whose livelihoods have been badly affected by the Covid-19 pandemic.

    Feb 21, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Nick Cave has launched an initiative to raise funds for cash-strapped crew members struggling due to the Covid-19 lockdown.
    The rocker and his band The Bad Seeds were forced to cancel their 2021 tour at the end of last year, resulting in further financial hardship for their road crew and now Cave is hoping the crowdfunding idea will help cover their basic living costs.
    He and his bandmates are offering up a series of prizes and experiences for fans to bid on as part of the crowdfunder, which launched on Thursday (18Feb21).
    “Work for our crew has vanished,” a message on the site reads. “As freelancers, there has been little or no support on offer to them from the authorities, and available work elsewhere is currently almost non-existent.”

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    “We have supported our direct crew as best as we can, but we thought we’d also have a bit of fun with a prize draw to help raise funds for them.”
    Cave and his bandmates aren’t the only ones launching campaigns to help crew members – Foo Fighters and Muse are among the acts who have donated prizes for a #ILoveLive draw, with all proceeds benefiting charities set up to aid out-of-work crew members.

    Nick Cave and his band offer more than 100 prizes for the fundraiser. “Among the prizes to win are The Bad Seeds’ own signed instruments, a limited edition art print of Nick Cave, show tickets, gift vouchers, and much more,” they announced.

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    Pete Townshend Has Amassed ‘Pages and Pages of Draft Lyrics’ for The Who’s Next Album

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    Pete Townshend Has Amassed 'Pages and Pages of Draft Lyrics' for The Who's Next Album

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    Pete plans to reunite with bandmate Roger Daltrey in recording studio to work on their band’s next studio installment as the reminder of their tour is canceled due to Covid-19 crisis.

    Feb 21, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Rocker Pete Townshend is plotting to team up with singer Roger Daltrey after lockdown for a new The Who album.
    The guitarist, 75, is working in his home studio and “wants to make another” record if it’s worthwhile financially, insisting streaming income is “a joke.”
    “There’s pages and pages of draft lyrics,” he says, reported Britain’s Daily Mirror newspaper. “If the moment comes, I’ll go in and start.”

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    The band released their 12th studio album, “Who”, in 2019 to critical acclaim, but the star admits he and frontman Daltrey, 76, “only just about got it done” due to their differing views.
    “We’re very different – politically, socially, spiritually, in every respect,” he adds. “But we happen to be in this band together.”
    Amid the pandemic, the rockers have been forced to cancel previously-postponed plans to tour the U.K. and Ireland. The musicians had originally rescheduled the March, 2020 dates for this year (21), but ongoing coronavirus concerns prompted them to ditch the shows altogether to avoid possibly having to rebook the gigs once more.
    “We are very sorry that we have to cancel our planned March 2021 UK and Ireland shows. Please excuse the delay but we wanted to wait as long as possible to see if we could indeed play them. However, as you can see the current situation makes this impossible. Thanks for all your wonderful support and we hope to see you in the future when conditions allow,” the duo issued a joint apology following the cancellation.

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    Lana Del Rey Almost Gave Up Music After Tragic Death of Her Idol Amy Winehouse

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    The ‘Video Games’ singer claims she was so devastated by the tragic death of the ‘Rehab’ hitmaker back in 2011 that she nearly turned her back on music.

    Feb 21, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Lana Del Rey “didn’t want to sing anymore” after her idol Amy Winehouse passed away in 2011.
    The “Video Games” hitmaker tells MOJO magazine she’ll always remember receiving her first review, as it came in on the same day the “Rehab” singer died of alcohol poisoning, aged 27, in July 2011.
    She recalls, “I had 10 seconds of the most elated feeling, and then the news everywhere, on all of the televisions, was that Amy had died on her front steps and I was like no. NO.”
    “Everyone was watching, mesmerised, but I personally felt like I didn’t even want to sing anymore.”

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    The “Blue Jeans” star goes on to admit she loved the anonymity and lack of pressure in the early days of her career, revealing she even recorded a track for a toilet roll commercial.
    She said, “I maybe thought about Broadway. You’d get like a hundred dollars for singing background on records that would lead to nowhere.”
    “There was this company that emerged called The Orchard that was taking submissions for, like, toilet paper commercials and I definitely did one, like, under a pseudonym.”
    “Definitely the happiest I’ve ever been. Stay in the middle, no dog in the race, people would even hire me for background stuff. I tried to act so cool on every sofa I sat at.”
    But Lana, who is set to release her seventh album “Chemtrails over the Country Club” on 19 May, insists she has no plans to step back from the limelight, sharing she has a “cover album of country songs” and another collection of “other folk songs” waiting to be released.

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