More stories

  • in

    Live Nation Closes Gap in Refund Policy After Fan Complaints

    Live Nation Entertainment, the biggest power in the concert industry, closed a gap in its ticket refund policy on Friday, after weeks of criticism that the company, and its Ticketmaster subsidiary, were not returning hundreds of millions of dollars that fans had spent on concerts postponed by the pandemic.“Fans, we hear you,” Michael Rapino, Live Nation’s chief executive, tweeted when announcing the new policy. “We don’t want you to be waiting in limbo while shows are being rescheduled.”In an earlier announcement, the company set up a 30-day window for requesting refunds when a postponed show was given a new date. But that policy did not apply to thousands of concerts that had been bumped from their original dates but had no new ones — leaving the money fans spent on those shows in a purgatorial state.According to Ticketmaster — which sells tickets on behalf of Live Nation and many other promoters — about 45 percent of the 30,000 shows so far disrupted by coronavirus fell into this category.Under Live Nation’s new policy, customers holding tickets to events with no new date will be able to request a refund after waiting 60 days from the time their postponement was announced; they will then have 30 days to ask for their money back. This comes in addition to rules that Live Nation already announced, giving people 30 days to request refunds for shows that have already been rescheduled, starting May 1. Events canceled outright will be refunded automatically.For example: If a Live Nation concert was postponed on, say, March 15 and had not been rescheduled by May 15, ticket holders would be able to request a refund at that point. They would have 30 days to make the request. (Ticketmaster says it can take a month to process a refund.)AEG Presents, Live Nation’s biggest competitor, has also announced refunds for rescheduled shows, and a spokesman for the company said it intends to assign new dates to 50 percent of its postponed events by the end of May. But it has not announced a similar plan for giving refunds to events with no new dates planned.Live Nation and Ticketmaster have been the targets of intense criticism from fans — and from lawmakers — since the early days of the pandemic, who accused the companies of postponing events indefinitely and holding on to money that consumers now need for essentials.Representative Bill Pascrell Jr., a Democrat from New Jersey, who criticized Live Nation and Ticketmaster’s response, welcomed the change. More

  • in

    Post Malone Covering Nirvana for Virus Relief? Bring on the ‘Bleach’

    On Wednesday, in a brief, vague video teaser, the immensely popular rap-adjacent superstar Post Malone announced that something called the “Post Malone Nirvana Tribute Livestream” would be happening on his YouTube channel on Friday evening.Nirvana purists were skeptical. Sure, the 24-year-old born Austin Post has paid homage, or at least lip service, to the rock gods before, breaking through with a catchy smash called “Rockstar” and quickly becoming the go-to guitar-wielding 20-something representing his cohort in feel-good intergenerational awards show performances (with Red Hot Chili Peppers at last year’s Grammys; with Aerosmith at last year’s MTV Video Music Awards).On the other hand, Post Malone was born a year after Kurt Cobain died, makes narcotically sing-songy tunes and writes lyrics about wearing Versace boxers and 50-carat rings on a superyacht. It was anyone’s guess what that guy’s cover of “Heart-Shaped Box” was going to sound like.But as it turned out? Surprisingly faithful to the original.From the moment a contagiously grinning Post Malone walked into the frame and picked from his fleet of guitars, it was clear that he was not merely one of those come-lately fans that Cobain dissed in “In Bloom” — the kind who like to sing along but “don’t know what it means” — but a musician with a deep reverence for the Seattle trio and an intimate familiarity with its catalog. (He was also clad in a tent-like floral dress, just like the ones Cobain sometimes wore in concert — a tenderly observant detail.)He and his band opened with a pummeling rendition of the “In Utero” album cut “Frances Farmer Will Have Her Revenge on Seattle,” featuring a refrain that, for any cynics, drew a clear line from Cobain’s sensibility to Post Malone’s emo-inflected hooks: “I miss the comfort of being sad.” More

  • in

    Dawes Frontman and Real Estate to Be Part of Grateful Dead Virtual Tribute

    Honoring Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter, the sixth Live From Out There weekend festival will be staged online on April 26 to raise funds for coronavirus relief causes.
    Apr 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Dawes frontman Taylor Goldsmith and members of rock band Real Estate are among the stars set to take part in a virtual tribute to Grateful Dead legends Jerry Garcia and lyricist Robert Hunter.
    The musicians will be part of the line-up for the sixth “Live From Out There” weekend festival, staged online on Sunday (April 26) to raise funds for coronavirus relief causes.
    Also performing from isolation will be The Decemberists’ Chris Funk, George Porter Jr. of The Meters, Brian Elmquist from The Lone Bellow, James Petralli of White Denim, and Paul Hoffman from Greensky Bluegrass, among others.
    This weekend’s festivities will kick off at 7 P.M. ET with Songs That Saved Me podcast host Ross James remotely welcoming Grateful Dead co-founders Phil Lesh and Bob Weir to the kitchen for a special Dumplings and Dead online cooking class, alongside celebrity chefs Andrew Zimmern, Matty Matheson and Wylie Dufresne.
    Musician Oteil Burbridge will then perform the music of Jerry Garcia on the piano for the very first time at 8 P.M. ET, before the “Celebrating Jerry Garcia and Robert Hunter” main event launches at 9.15 P.M. ET.
    During the shows, viewers will be invited to donate to support artists and crews left out of work by the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Almost $300,000 (£242,500) had already been raised prior to Sunday’s event which can be viewed at: https://livefromoutthere.com/.

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    JayDaYoungan and Pregnant Girlfriend Arrested During Murder-Related Search

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Carrie Underwood Joins Saturday Line-Up for Virtual Stagecoach Festival

    Instagram

    The music event, which got postponed because of the novel coronavirus, has also secured Thomas Rhett, Eric Church and many others as it gets renamed into ‘Stagecouch’ for its online broadcasts.
    Apr 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Carrie Underwood and Thomas Rhett are among a host of stars performing from their homes for an online version of the Stagecoach festival this weekend, April 24-26.
    The event was due to get underway in Indio, California on Friday (April 24), but was postponed until October last month as the coronavirus pandemic hit the U.S.
    However, the country stars are aiming to make things up to fans by broadcasting shows over the weekend on SiriusXM’s The Highway internet radio station for an event dubbed ‘Stagecouch’.
    Thomas headlines Friday’s broadcast, with Carrie Underwood closing things out on Saturday, and country superstar Eric Church completing the weekend on Sunday.
    The broadcasts, running from 12 pm to 5 pm EST, with an encore in the evenings, will also feature Ashley McBryde, Dustin Lynch, Gabby Barrett, Ingrid Andress, Jon Pardi, Midland, Old Dominion and more.
    Announcing the event in a press release, Steve Blatter, Sirius XM’s General Manager for Music Programming said: “In this challenging time, we want to continue to help bring artists and fans together, just as they would at Stagecoach.”
    “With the amazing help of the many great Country music artists involved, this prestigious annual event will come to life like it never has before on The Highway.”
    Friday’s other livestreams include rock icon Joan Jett performing from home for Rolling Stone’s In My Room series, lining up a virtual show at 3pm EST on Rolling Stone’s Instagram account, and Post Malone hosting a special concert featuring his rendition of Nirvana songs from 6 P.M.

    Over the weekend music fans can also relive “epic” past performances by the likes of Cardi B, Ed Sheeran, and Bruno Mars as part of the 72-hour PlayOn Fest at here and Songkick’s YouTube page.

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Phoebe Waller-Bridge Extends COVID-19 Charity Streaming of ‘Fleabag’

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Michael Cogswell, 66, Dies; Sustained Louis Armstrong’s Legacy

    Michael Cogswell, who turned Louis Armstrong’s trove of memorabilia into a scholarly archive and transformed the joyful trumpeter’s two-bedroom brick house in Queens into a popular museum, died on Monday in Manhattan. He was 66. His wife, Dale Van Dyke, said the cause was complications of bladder cancer.When Armstrong died in 1971, he left behind 72 cartons packed with artifacts from his decades as probably the most celebrated figure in jazz. Inside the boxes were 650 reel-to-reel tape recordings of songs, ideas and conversations; at least 5,000 photographs; 86 scrapbooks; 240 acetate disks of live recordings that he made at home; five trumpets; and 14 mouthpieces.Mr. Cogswell, a saxophonist whose master’s thesis was on four solos played by the pioneering free-jazz saxophonist Ornette Coleman, knew little about Armstrong when he answered a newspaper ad in 1991 for the archivist job. But after spending three years cataloging the archive at Queens College — Armstrong’s wife, Lucille, had bequeathed the house to the college — he had become a devoted Satchmo fan and expert.And, consumed by the life and career of Armstrong, Mr. Cogswell rarely played the saxophone again.“Before the job, there were two people in this marriage,” Ms. Van Dyke said in a phone interview. “When Louis came into Michael’s life, he came into my life, and all of a sudden there were three people in this marriage, and that was fine with me.”But the archive was only the start of Mr. Cogswell’s 27-year association with Armstrong’s legacy. Over the next nine years, as the executive director of what would become the Louis Armstrong House Museum, Mr. Cogswell worked with a small staff on a $5 million renovation that preserved the house — lavishly decorated, on 107th Street in Corona, a working-class neighborhood — as if the Armstrongs were still living there and created a museum inside it.In the basement is a permanent exhibition featuring Armstrong’s gold record for “Hello, Dolly!,” a trumpet given to him by King George V of England and a manuscript Armstrong wrote about living in Corona.Inside Armstrong’s den are samples from his vast record collection and a portrait of him painted by Tony Bennett. The garage was converted into a gift shop.In 2009, Mr. Cogswell reflected on his fascination with Armstrong. “I haven’t hit bottom yet,” he told the Queens College website. “Louis Armstrong is endlessly interesting. He was a trumpet player, vocalist, actor and author. But for all these accomplishments, what inspires me is Louis Armstrong, the person.“He was a beautiful guy. He was humble. He was generous. He was a genius.”Michael Bruce Cogswell was born on Sept. 30, 1953, in Buffalo, N.Y., and raised in Fairfax County, Va. His father, Charles, was a marketing consultant and a former brigadier general in the Marine Corps. His mother, Margaret (Hoyt) Cogswell, was a homemaker.After three semesters at the University of Virginia, he dropped out in 1973 and played with bands in Charlottesville, Va., and Boston. Later returning to the university, he received a bachelor’s degree in musicology in 1983.He earned a master’s in jazz studies at the University of North Texas, in Denton, and played locally with the Pinky Purinton big band. He worked in the university’s music library, where he organized the bandleader Stan Kenton’s collection, which included some 2,000 manuscripts.Looking for his next step, he responded to an advertisement in an education publication for an archivist to handle the Armstrong collection. “He told me, ‘That’s my job,’” Ms. Van Dyke recalled.Once he started working at Queens College, Mr. Cogswell earned a master’s in library science.Loren Schoenberg, senior scholar and founding director of the National Jazz Museum in Harlem, said an email that Mr. Cogswell’s development of the archive and museum helped elevate Armstrong’s reputation beyond being a beloved entertainer, making many more people aware that he was the “prime architect of jazz.”Mr. Cogswell used his knowledge of the Armstrong archive to write the book “Louis Armstrong: The Offstage Story of Satchmo” (2003).One more project occupied Mr. Cogswell for more than a decade: building a $23 million education center across the street from the Armstrong house. It will house the archives, an exhibition gallery, a jazz club and a museum store. It broke ground in 2017, nearly a year before illness caused Mr. Cogswell to retire. (The coronavirus pandemic has halted construction.)In addition to his wife, he is survived by two brothers, Frank and Charles.Armstrong’s personal archive has been augmented over the years by donations of photographs, correspondence and recordings. But perhaps the most unusual donation came in 1997, when Mr. Cogswell received a call from a woman named Dorothea Vunk.She offered a gift: the trumpet that Armstrong had received in 1934 from King George V. Several years later, Armstrong gave it to Ms. Vunk’s husband, Lyman, a young member of Charlie Barnet’s band.“Michael said, ‘Thanks, where do you want to meet?’” David Ostwald, the former chairman of the Armstrong museum, said by phone. “She said, ‘I’ll meet you at the subway.’ Michael had all these official papers, but she had the trumpet in a paper bag and surreptitiously handed it to him, and she quickly disappeared.” More

  • in

    New Kids on the Block Hook Up With Boyz II Men for Coronavirus Benefit Single

    WENN

    To raise funds for charity campaign No Kid Hungry, the iconic boyband has also teamed up with Jordin Sparks, Big Freedia and Naughty by Nature on the dance anthem titled ‘House Party’.
    Apr 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – New Kids On The Block have recruited Boyz II Men for new dance anthem “House Party” to benefit coronavirus relief efforts.
    The iconic boyband teamed up with the legendary R&B group on the track, along with Jordin Sparks, Big Freedia and Naughty by Nature, to raise funds for No Kid Hungry, a charity campaign launched by officials at the Share Our Strength organization to provide assistance to those adversely affected by COVID-19.
    “I was inspired. People need to be entertained, to feel light, to be happy,” New Kids on the Block singer Donnie Wahlberg said of the song in a press release. “If we can do even the smallest thing to lift someone’s day we will do that. And in doing so, we will also donate all net proceeds to benefit No Kid Hungry. All we want to do is give back in the best way we know how.”
    Donnie’s brother Mark Wahlberg and country singer Carrie Underwood are among the other famous stars appearing in the music video for “House Party”.
    [embedded content]
    New Kids on the Block have also put a tour package up for auction to help with pandemic relief, with bidding open until 8 May. Fans can bid at: https://one.bidpal.net/nkotb/welcome.

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Carrie Underwood Joins Saturday Line-Up for Virtual Stagecoach Festival

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Beastie Boys Regrets Firing Female Drummer From the Band

    Apple

    The two remaining members Ad-Rock and Mike-D admit they had let down their female friends when they decided to kick out drummer Kate Schellenbach from their group.
    Apr 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Beastie Boys members Ad-Rock and Mike D regret letting down women by ditching drummer Kate Schellenbach when they switched from punk music to hip-hop.
    The two, who haven’t performed or recorded together since the death of third member Adam ‘MCA’ Yauch in 2012, started out as a punk four-piece before switching to rap when Kate left the band in 1984, signing to Def Jam and going on to huge success.
    Ad-Rock, real name Adam Horovitz, tells Britain’s The Sunday Times newspaper that he regrets falling out with Kate and letting down women by living up to misogynist caricatures of behaviour in the music industry.
    “We started out as a hardcore punk band, with Kate Schellenbach as our drummer,” he says. “We ended up a cartoon rap version of a 1980s metal band and we kicked Kate out. How wrong was that? When the Beastie Boys began, the majority of our friends were girls. It’s embarrassing to think we let them down.”
    He also has regrets over the band’s biggest mainstream hit – “(You Gotta) Fight for Your Right (to Party!)” – as it was originally supposed to be a parody of frat boy attitudes.
    “It was making fun of party bros (brothers) and frat boys,” the 53 year old says. “We’d never actually met any, but we thought they were hilarious to make fun of. Then it became a hit, and gradually that’s what we started to become.”
    He says the song’s success was one reason the group left Def Jam – as it fell out with label boss Russell Simmons over its musical direction.
    “When we started becoming a self-caricature, Russell wouldn’t pay us unless we carried on doing it,” he adds. “So we quit.”
    A new documentary on the group’s career, “Beastie Boys Story”, is available on Apple TV+.

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Ariana Grande, Shawn Mendes and Lil Nas X to Lead Revamped 2020 Nickelodeon Kids’ Choice Awards

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Juice WRLD Gets Animated in Music Video for First Posthumous Song

    The ‘Lucid Dreams’ hitmaker is brought to life as a cartoon character as he’s fighting his demons in a music video to support his first posthumous single called ‘Righteous’.
    Apr 25, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Late rapper Juice WRLD leaves the Earth and flies off into the galaxy in the new music video for his first posthumous release, “Righteous”.
    The new track debuted on Friday, April 24, 2020, with the emotive slow burner packed with references to pills, demons, and “anxiety the size of a planet.”
    Alongside the new release, the first since the “Lucid Dreams” star, real name Jarad Higgins, died after suffering a seizure just six days after turning 21 last December 2019, a music video for the tune also dropped, featuring footage of the hitmaker working in the studio, performing onstage, and kissing his girlfriend, before it turns into an animated adventure in which Juice fights his demons.
    After overcoming his struggles in the clip, the video ends with the words “Legends Never Die” scrawled across the screen.
    [embedded content]
    “Righteous” was announced on Thursday in a tweet from the rapper’s family and team explaining, “Juice was a prolific artist who dedicated his life to making music. Choosing how to share his upcoming music with the world has been no easy feat.”
    “Honouring the love Juice felt for his fans while shining a light on his talents and his spirit are the most important parts of this process to us… Tonight we will be releasing a song called ‘Righteous’ which Juice made from his home studio in Los Angeles. We hope you enjoy this new music and continue to keep Juice’s spirit alive.”

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Coronavirus-Stricken Nick Cordero Given All Clear after Leg Amputation

    Related Posts More