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    Globalfest Moves Online, Showcasing World Music Without Boundaries

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyGlobalfest Moves Online, Showcasing World Music Without BoundariesWith 16 bands over four nights, the festival expanded its reach at a time when live music with audiences is in short supply.Minyo Crusaders performing at Globalfest this week. The event, usually a live showcase in New York City, went online this year.Credit…GlobalFESTJan. 15, 2021Updated 7:27 p.m. ETMinyo Crusaders set an old Japanese song, from a tradition called minyo, to a Nigerian Afrobeat groove. DakhaBrakha, from Ukraine, roved from Eastern European drones and yipping vocals to something like girl-group rock. Aditya Prakash, from Los Angeles, sang a joyful Hindu devotional over upbeat jazz from his ensemble, sharing its melody with a trombone. Rachele Andrioli, from southern Italy, sang a fierce tarantella accompanying herself with a tambourine and electronic loops of a jaw harp and her voice. Hit La Rosa, from Peru, topped the clip-clop beat of cumbia with surreal lyrics, surf-reverbed guitar solos and psychedelic swoops and echoes.They were all part of the 18th annual Globalfest, the world-music showcase that moved online this year as a partnership with NPR Music’s Tiny Desk Concerts series, which will preserve the performances online. Previous Globalfests were one-night live showcases in New York City for a dozen bands on club stages. But for this pandemic year, musicians recorded themselves performing live at home: living rooms, studios, a record-company office, a backyard barbecue. Angélique Kidjo, the singer from Benin who appeared at the first Globalfest, played virtual host in eye-popping outfits; musicians made sure to have at least one globe on camera. The sets were short, just two or three songs each. But Globalfest’s potential audience has been hugely multiplied.Dedicated Men of Zion, a multigenerational family band, sang gospel standards.Credit…GlobalFESTWhile necessity forced Globalfest online, networking has long been built into its music. Many musicians who cherish local and traditional styles have decided that the way to ensure their survival is through adaptation and hybridization, retaining the essence while modernizing the delivery system. For musicians, fusion is also fun: a chance to learn new skills, a way to discover creative connections. There are commonalities in the ways voices can croon or bite or break, in mechanisms like repetition or call-and-response, in wanting people to dance. Modernization doesn’t have to mean homogenization.There were traditionalists at Globalfest. Dedicated Men of Zion, a multigenerational band of family members, sang hard-driving gospel standards like “Can’t Turn Me Around,” rasping and soaring into falsetto, from a backyard in North Carolina with a smoking barbecue grill. Edwin Perez led a 10-piece band — mostly Cuban musicians — updating a New York style that flourished in the 1970s and 1980s: salsa dura, propulsive and danceable with jabbing horns, insistent percussion and socially conscious lyrics. (One song was “No Puedo Respirar” — “I Can’t Breathe.”)But tradition often came with a twist. Nora Brown adeptly played and sang Appalachian banjo songs from Kentucky, passed down through personal contact with elder generations, even though she’s a 15-year-old from Brooklyn, where she performed in a tunnel under Crown Heights with a train rumbling overhead. Rokia Traoré, from Mali, has an extensive catalog of her own songs, but her set reached back to a tradition of epic song: centuries-old historical praise of generals who built the West African Mande empire — “Tiramakan” and “Fakoly.” She sang over mesmerizing vamps, plucked and plinked on ngoni (lute) and balafon (xylophone), progressing from delicacy to vehemence, from gently melodic phrases to rapid-fire declamation, putting her virtuosity in service to the lore she conveyed.Sofia Rei conjured a wildly eclectic mix from her New York living room.Credit…GlobalFESTMusicians securely grounded in their own cultures also felt free to experiment with others. Martha Redbone — born in Kentucky with Cherokee, Choctaw and African-American ancestors — punctuated bluesy, compassionate soul songs with Native American rattles and percussive syllables. Elisapie sang in her Native American language, Inuktitut, as she led her Canadian rock band in volatile songs that built from folky picking to full-scale stomps. Emel, a Tunisian singer influenced by the protest music of Joan Baez, sang two songs from a living room in Paris. They were introspective, brooding, keening crescendos: “Holm” (“A Dream”), which envisioned a “bitter reality that destroys everything we build,” and, in English, “Everywhere We Looked Was Burning.”Labess, a Canadian band led by an Algerian singer, had musicians performing remotely from France and Colombia; its set roved from Arabic-flavored songs to, for its finale, “La Vida Es Un Carnaval,” a kind of flamenco-samba-chanson amalgam with French lyrics and a button-accordion solo. Natu Camara, a singer from Guinea now based in New York, gave her West African pop a tinge of American funk as she offered determinedly uplifting messages.And Sofia Rei, an Argentine singer now based in New York, conjured a wildly eclectic, near hallucinatory international mix from her living room with her band: Andean, Asian, jazz, funk, electronics. True to Globalfest’s boundary-scrambling mission, she sang about living under “Un Mismo Cielo”: “The Same Sky.”AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Foo Fighters, John Legend, Bruce Springsteen Added to Joe Biden's Inauguration Line-Up

    WENN

    More big stars like Kerry Washington and Eva Longoria have also been confirmed to join the upcoming presidential inauguration as the new U.S. leader is sworn in at the Capitol.

    Jan 16, 2021
    AceShowbiz – The Foo Fighters and John Legend will join Kerry Washington, Eva Longoria, and Bruce Springsteen at U.S. President-elect Joe Biden’s inauguration celebration.
    The stars have all been added to the line-up for the “Celebrating America” TV special, which will be hosted by Tom Hanks on Wednesday (20Jan21) after the Democratic Party leader and his Vice President, Kamala Harris, are sworn in at the U.S. Capitol in Washington, D.C.
    As previously announced, Jon Bon Jovi, Justin Timberlake and Ant Clemons, and Demi Lovato are all set to perform remotely, too.
    Meanwhile, organisers have confirmed that Eva and Kerry “will introduce segments throughout the night, ranging from stories of young people making a difference in their communities to musical performances.”
    They have also promised the event “will showcase the American people’s resilience, heroism, and unified commitment to coming together as a nation to heal and rebuild.”

      See also…

    The special will also feature speeches by Biden and Harris.
    Lady GaGa is tapped to sing the national anthem. Jennifer Lopez is also among the performers.
    Days before the big event, the likes of Carole King, James Taylor, Fall Out Boy, and will.i.am will be celebrating the new President- and Vice President-elect in a star-studded virtual “We the People” pre-inauguration concert.
    Ben Harper, AJR, Michael Bivins, Keegan-Michael Key, Debra Messing, Connie Britton, Kal Penn, Sophia Bush, and Jamie Camil are among the guests at the upcoming online gig as well.
    It will double as a fundraiser for the Biden Inaugural Committee, with access to the 8pm ET show granted in exchange for any size of donation. For tickets, visit: actblue.com.

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    Sincere, Outdoorsy, Trippy, a Music Festival Breathes Los Angeles

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    The Blockbuster ‘Drivers License,’ a Possible Reply and 7 More New Songs

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    Hong Kong Elvis Impersonator Dies at 68

    AdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyMelvis Kwok, Tireless Elvis Impersonator in Hong Kong, Dies at 68Mr. Kwok, who busked in the Chinese territory for 28 years, was hardly the first Elvis Presley impersonator in Asia. But he may have been the most committed.Melvis Kwok, who died last month at 68, was a full-time Elvis impersonator in Hong Kong. “Elvis is my savior,” he once told The New York Times.Credit…Antony Dickson/South China Morning Post, via Getty ImagesJan. 15, 2021Updated 3:06 a.m. ETHONG KONG — For nearly three decades, Melvis Kwok spent his evenings dressed as Elvis Presley, playing guitar on the sidewalks of Hong Kong as neon signs reflected off his sequined jumpsuits.In a banking hub full of office workers, Mr. Kwok, who died last month at 68, was a rare figure: a full-time busker with a rockabilly pompadour. He played through rain and blistering heat, and for years before and after Britain returned the territory to Chinese rule in 1997.He was hardly the first singer in Asia to imitate Elvis, who died in 1977. But he may have been the most committed.Mr. Kwok liked to say that he had not missed a day of busking in 28 years. He also impersonated Elvis even when he was not performing, saying that his goal was to bring the American rock ’n’ roll legend back to life.“I am very satisfied,” he told The New York Times in 2010, at a time when he was clearing about $64 a night in tips. “If I stop, I will collapse.”Mr. Kwok, whose real name was Kwok Lam-sang, died on Dec. 29 in Hong Kong, said Helen Ma, the president of the local chapter of the International Elvis Presley Fan Club, which reported the death on its Facebook page this week. She said the cause was kidney failure.Impersonating Elvis is apparently still a thing, and not only in Las Vegas, where a look-alike will walk brides down the aisle at the Graceland Wedding Chapel for $199.In 2017, for instance, more than 20 impersonators from across the Asia Pacific region turned up in the Philippines for an “Elvis in Asia” contest. The winner won a trip to Graceland, the Presley estate in Memphis, Tenn.And in Hong Kong, the local Elvis fan club holds regular events and has more than 2,400 Facebook followers. Mr. Kwok was one of two noted Elvis impersonators in the city of 7.5 million.“Elvis is my savior,” he told The Times in 2010, speaking in a coffee shop before heading out for his nightly rounds.Mr. Kwok rarely played inside venues, said Jonathan Zeman of the Lan Kwai Fong Group, a local entertainment and hospitality group. Instead, he would saunter through nightlife districts and approach people who were drinking in the street or in doorways.“Played an Elvis song for a small group of people, made them happy, received a few dollars,” Mr. Zeman said.Mr. Kwok rarely played inside venues. Instead, he would saunter through Hong Kong’s nightlife districts, approaching people who were drinking in the street or in doorways.Credit…Anthony Wallace/Agence France-Presse — Getty ImagesKwok Lam-sang was born in Jakarta, the Indonesian capital, and was ethnically Chinese, Ms. Ha said. Other details about his life, including his exact date of birth and details about his parents, were not immediately available.In 1967, a year after Mao Zedong began the Cultural Revolution, Mr. Kwok’s family moved to the southern Chinese province of Guizhou, he said in a recent interview with The South China Morning Post newspaper.He attended high school on the mainland and moved to Hong Kong in 1974, where he worked in a factory as an electrician. He became interested in Elvis after hearing of the singer’s death and watching a documentary about him.“I cried a long time,” he told The Times, recalling the first time he saw the film, “Elvis: That’s the Way It Is.”Mr. Kwok won a pair of Elvis-impersonation contests in the early 1980s, The South China Morning Post reported, but local Chinese fans often mistook him for an imitator of other famous musicians — a Beatle, say, or Michael Jackson.By 1992, Mr. Kwok had quit his job and branded himself the “Cat King,” the Chinese moniker for Elvis. He’d also set his sights on an easier quarry: Western expatriates and tourists.His guitar was sometimes out of tune, his self-taught English a bit rough. (His business card misspelled Presley’s first name.)Still, he earned a living, and said that being Elvis beat factory work. Some revelers came to know him as Melvis — no relation to Relvis, an impersonator in the United States — or the “Lan Kwai Fong Elvis,” a reference to a nightlife district where he often performed.Mr. Kwok died at the end of a year in which coronavirus infections in live music venues led the government to close them for months on end, emptying the sidewalks of his potential customers. Ms. Ma said that he spent much of his pandemic downtime watching Elvis videos and playing guitar in his apartment.Mr. Kwok is survived by his wife, Anna, and their two children, a son and a daughter.His wife, who was also his manager, told The Times in 2010 that she had not initially supported his campaign to be Elvis. “But then I was moved by his persistence and devotion to the job,” she said.It’s hard to find a job one loves, she added. “Now that he’s found it, I am happy to support him.”AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

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    Fans Believe Selena Gomez Talks About Ex Justin Bieber in Heartbreak Anthem 'De Una Vez'

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    In the newly-released Spanish-language song, the 28-year-old ‘Lose You to Love Me’ songstress is singing about a difficult past love as she’s overcoming a heartbreak.

    Jan 15, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Selena Gomez has released new music “De Una Vez”, another Spanish-language song following her 2018 track “Taki Taki”. In the song, which was unveiled on Thursday, January 14, Selena is singing about a difficult past love as she’s overcoming a heartbreak.
    “Once and for all, ah-ah-ah/ I’m stronger alone, ah-ah-ah (I’m stronger alone)/ It’s just that I do not regret the past,” so the former Disney darling sings, according to the English translation by Genius. “I know that time by your side cut my wings/ But now this chest is bulletproof.”
    Upon learning the meaning of the lyrics, fans quickly speculated that Selena’s ex Justin Bieber was the inspiration behind the song. “I thought Selena singing in Spanish as a way to attract attention because she no longer have Justin to do so ! But I WAS WRONG ,Girlie still wrote the song about him HELP jghghghhgh,” one fan opined.

      See also…

    Another fan posted a GIF of a guy crying as he puts down his phone. “Justin Bieber after translating DE UNA VEZ,” the fan wrote in the caption.
    In related news, Selena, who looks stunning in a floral dress in the music video for the song, explained to Zane Lowe on Apple Music why she decided to sing in Spanish now. “This has been something I’ve wanted to do for 10 years, working on a Spanish project, because I’m so, so proud of my heritage, and just genuinely felt like I wanted this to happen,” she said.
    “And it happened, and I feel like it’s the perfect timing. Just with all the division in the world, there’s something about Latin music that globally just makes people feel things, you know?” the “Lose You to Love Me” songstress added.
    “You know what’s funny, is I actually think I sing better in Spanish,” the 28-year-old star continued. “That was something I discovered. It was a lot of work, and look, you cannot mispronounce anything. It is something that needed to be precise, and needed to be respected by the audience I’m going to release this for. Of course I want everyone to enjoy the music, but I am targeting my fan base. I’m targeting my heritage, and I couldn’t be more excited.”

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    Ariana Grande Spices Up '34+35' Remix With Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion

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    The ‘Thank U, Next’ songstress unveils the remixed version of her ‘Positions’ single featuring the ‘Juicy’ raptress and the ‘Savage’ hitmaker along with its official lyrics video.

    Jan 15, 2021
    AceShowbiz – Ariana Grande has dropped a remix of her latest single “34+35” featuring Doja Cat and Megan Thee Stallion. After teasing it hours earlier, the former Nickelodeon star debuted the new song on midnight Friday, January 15.
    The playful sexual track opens with Ariana’s original verse, before Doja follows in the second verse. The “Mooo!” raptress references the song’s mathematical title while dropping a reference to Brooklyn rapper 6ix9ine in her own part.
    “Add up the numbers or get behind that/ Play and rewind that, listen, you’ll find that,” she raps. “I want that 69 without Tekashi/ And I want your body and I make it obvious.”
    Megan comes midway through the song. “Rock you like a baby/ But you know I’m bout to keep you up,” she spits her equally raunchy lyrics, dropping an expletive. “Welcome to my channel/ And today I’m bout to teach you sum/ I can make it pop legs up like a can can/ Wake the neighbors up/ Make it sound like the band playing/ B***h, let me get cute.”

      See also…

    “34+35” is the second single of Ariana’s sixth studio album “Positions”, which hit the stores on October 30, 2020. Preceded by lead single and title track “Positions”, “34+35” arrived on the same day of the album’s release along with its official music video.

    On Thursday, January 14, the “7 Rings” songstress teased the remix with a 16-second clip featuring a vintage TV which displays her vague silhouette with two mystery individuals on either side of her on the screen. She later confirmed Megan and Doja’s guest appearances on the song, posting on Instagram, “tonight @dojacat @theestallion,” along with the song’s cover art.

    “34+35” sits at No. 13 on Billboard Hot 100 chart this week after previously peaking at No. 8 and is poised to return to the top 10 with the nice boost from the Megan and Doja collaboration. The album itself debuted at No. 1 on Billboard 200 chart.

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    Cardi B Spent $1 Million to Make 'WAP' Music Video

    The ‘Bodak Yellow’ hitmaker reveals her steamy music video which features the likes of Megan Thee Stallion, Kylie Jenner, Normani, and Rosalia cost $1 million to make.

    Jan 15, 2021
    AceShowbiz – p > Cardi B has claimed it cost $1 million (£770,000) to shoot the music video for “WAP”.
    The promo for Cardi and fellow rapper Megan Thee Stallion’s explicit 2020 hit – which saw the girls film at a mansion with real-life snakes with appearances from the likes of Kylie Jenner and Normani Kordei – cost the eye-watering sum, Cardi has told a fan on Twitter.
    First of all, the “Press” rapper shared the video for her 2017 major-label debut single, “Bodak Yellow”, cost just $15,000 (£11,000).
    She wrote, “Fun fact : Bodak yellow music video cost me 15 thousand dollars .I was in Dubai and I said ….I gotta fly picture (videographer) out here …BOOM BOOM BANG ! Ya know the rest . (sic)”
    A follower then replied, “girl that’s a lot. (sic)”

      See also…

    However, the 28-year-old star responded with the cost of “WAP”, “Money”, and “Please Me”, which came to $1 million (£770,000), $400,000 (£300,000) and $900,000 (£660,424), respectively.
    She wrote back, “Naaaa honey ….Money cost 400K ,Please me Cost 900K ,Wap Cost a M ! (sic)”
    Meanwhile, Megan recently revealed she and Cardi were terrified of shooting with the reptiles.
    The pair were initially hesitant as neither of them had been around the creatures before, and the “Savage” hitmaker eventually “made friends” with one of them though her pal wasn’t so comfortable.
    She said, “OK, so what’s crazy is neither one of us had been around snakes before… I was like, ‘Friend, I don’t know if I can lay in snakes.’ ”
    “But Cardi B asked me to lay in some snakes, I’ve got to lay in the snakes for my girl.. I made friends with one who was on me the whole time. Cardi was so scared.”

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    Riz Ahmed Reveals His Wife’s Identity and Their First Meeting

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