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    Tom Jones Credits Late Wife for Saving Him From Ridicule for Attempting to Embrace Hip-Hop

    WENN

    The ‘It’s Not Unusual’ hitmaker recalls being advised by his late wife Linda against releasing a rap-inspired album after she listened to his experimental material.

    Apr 25, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Welsh crooner Tom Jones credits his late wife Linda with saving him from public ridicule after once attempting to embrace hip-hop in his pop music.

    The “It’s Not Unusual” hitmaker, who lost his longtime partner to lung cancer in 2016, recalls Linda wisely advising him against releasing his rap-inspired tunes after giving her a preview of his experimental material.

    “Every time I would record an album, she would be the first one I ever played it to and she would tell me what she thought,” Tom told U.S. news show “Today”.

    “I got a little, sort of hip-hop at one stage in my career and she said, ‘Who are you aiming this at?’ and I said, ‘Whoever wants to listen to it!’ ”

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    “She said, ‘There are other people who do that stuff, you don’t need to do that, do you…?’ and she was right, it didn’t really work.”

    Tom released “Surrounded by Time”, his first album since Linda’s passing, on Friday (23Apr21), and without having her as his sounding board, he can only imagine what she may make of the songs.

    “I would hope she would like it…,” he smiled.

    During the interview, Tom, who moved back to London from the U.S. following Linda’s death, admitted he still talks to his wife on a daily basis because he keeps her ashes in his bedroom so she will always be close by.

    He shared, “She wanted to be cremated… and I have her ashes in a box and I’ve got them in my bedroom on top of a chest of drawers with her photograph over the top, so she’s the last person I speak to at night, and the first person I speak to in the morning.”

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    Paul Weller Thinks He Would Be in 'Padded Cell' If He Didn't Make Music During Lockdown

    WENN

    The ‘Changingman’ singer jokingly said he might be committed to a mental hospital if he didn’t record music after his tour was called off because of Covid-19 lockdown.

    Apr 25, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Paul Weller thinks he’d be in a “padded cell” if he hadn’t been recording music through the coronavirus lockdown.

    The “Changingman” rocker has spent the last year working on new LP “Fat Pop (Volume 1)”, and he was grateful to still have a creative outlet when the world shut down because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

    Asked what it would have been like without access to a studio over this time, he told Uncut magazine, “I’d probably be in a padded cell. I’ve no idea.”

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    “I mean, perhaps I make it sound easier than it is. The songwriting part of it still involves an awful lot of finessing and chipping away.”

    And the star joked he made the record so he could get a “break” from his young children.

    Paul – who has adult kids Leah and Natt from his first marriage to Dee C. Lee, Dylan from a relationship with a make-up artist named Lucy, Jesamine and Stevie Mac with former partner Samantha Stock, and twins Bowie and John Paul and daughter Nova with wife Hannah – laughed, “I did the record so I could get away and have a f**king break! But I think I used (the time) wisely as well, you know?”

    Last year, he also released a new album called “On Sunset”. He previously said of his 2020 release, “Music is my obsession, it’s my education, it’s my entertainment, it’s the way that I communicate, it’s everything to me. Every track here reflects that obsession.”

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    Ed Sheeran Gearing Up for Music Comeback as He's Spotted Filming New Music Video

    WENN

    The ‘Thinking Out Loud’ hitmaker is expected to come out of his hiatus and release brand new music soon after he was spotted shooting a new music video in London.

    Apr 25, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Ed Sheeran is planning his music comeback.

    The singer has been on an 18-month hiatus to spend time with his wife Cherry Seaborn and baby daughter Lyra, but he has been spotted filming a new music video in London this week (begs19Apr21).

    A source told The Sun newspaper’s Bizarre column, “It was obvious something big was happening, there were camera crews and security cordons set-up.”

    “But you still don’t expect a superstar to be on the roof of the shopping centre.”

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    “He’s so recognisable straight away, and at that point he was just in his normal gear with his guitar so word got around fairly fast that Ed was filming – but he was cool about it, he was waving to some kids and laughing about it all, it was pretty surreal.”

    Ed was spotted playing his guitar on a rooftop in Catford, south east London and was also seen dressed up as a vampire for some scenes filmed in a cafe.

    The insider said, “There were quite a lot of fans later on and security were a bit anxious but he just knew how to do it, he posed for a few photos and then politely said he had to get back to work.”

    “He’s obviously planning for a big comeback. At times you could hear music playing which sounded great, but it wasn’t something I’d heard before.”

    Details of Ed Sheeran’s new music are still sketchy, but he marked his 30th birthday earlier this year with a hint about his next LP. “30 today,” he wrote. “Thank you for all your wonderful messages, I feel very loved. Currently dressed the same as I was on my 3rd birthday about to chow down on Colin the pirate caterpillar (cake), poor bloke. I’ll be back online with the 4th instalment in the series later this year, until then xx (sic).”

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    Sia's 'Music' Dominates 2021 Razzie Awards With Multiple Dishonors

    IMAX

    The controversial autism movie directed by the ‘Cheap Thrills’ hitmaker leads the winner list at the 41st annual Golden Raspberry Awards on the eve of Oscars.

    Apr 25, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Sia’s “Music” won three prizes at the 41st Golden Raspberry Awards.

    The controversial film – starring Kate Hudson and Maddie Ziegler – was awarded Worst Actress for Kate, Worst Supporting Actress for Maddie and Worst Director for Sia at the annual ceremony, which picks out the lowlights of the Hollywood year.

    The movie had been blasted by audiences and critics on its release and Sia had issued an apology for casting a neurotypical actress as a person with autism, and for scenes depicting the use of restraints on characters with autism.

    Sia previously tweeted, “I plan to remove the restraint scenes from all future printings. I listened to the wrong people and that is my responsibility, my research was clearly not thorough enough, not wide enough.”

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    Mike Lindell from “Absolute Proof” won Worst Actor while the movie also picked up the Worst Picture award.

    The documentary from American pillow magnate Lindell alleged that the 2020 Presidential election was marred by widespread fraud.

    Rudy Giuliani won Worst Supporting Actor for his appearance in “Borat Subsequent Moviefilm” and Robert Downey Jr.’s “Dolittle” was named Worst Rip-Off or Sequel.

    The winners of this year’s Razzies awards were announced in a video on YouTube.

    The full list of winners from the Golden Raspberry Awards 2021 is as follows:

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    DMX Credited for Saving Def Jam Records by Lyor Cohen

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    In the wake of the ‘X Gon’ Give It to Ya’ rapper’s passing, the music executive recalls the time he was seriously considering retirement due to competition with Diddy and Bad Boy Records.

    Apr 24, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Music mogul Lyor Cohen has paid DMX the ultimate tribute, crediting the late rapper for saving his Def Jam Records label.

    The music executive admits he was seriously considering retirement – because he felt he couldn’t compete with flamboyant rival P. Diddy over at Bad Boy Records – when Irv Gotti introduced him to Earl Simmons.

    “I didn’t know if I could contribute anymore, especially since Puffy [Diddy] and Bad Boy were dominating the airwaves,” Lyor tells Billboard. “Bad Boy, at that time, was all about aspirational, high technicolor, Versace and Rolls Royces. Def Jam’s architecture is black-and-white, with shades of grey. For me, I was contemplating retirement at the time. There’s nobody who could compete with Puffy when it comes to technicolor and aspiration.”

    “When Irv invited me to go to Yonkers and I met X, I remembered one of the things we really enjoyed doing was getting really quick photo shoots of artists we’re interested in… just to see if the magic of what we thought the artist was could be captured by a camera… and it was at that moment I realized there was more [for us to contribute], because it was a black-and-white photo…”

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    “At that moment, I knew that the common person who wasn’t thinking about Versace suits… and the reality of their struggle came into play. That was a real moment that I remember. I think everyone was tired of the technicolor and wanted something more real and down-to-earth. It resembled a life they know.”

    Cohen’s former partner, Kevin Liles, agrees, adding, “I truly believe he [DMX] wasn’t just a rapper. He was a minister, and someone put here at that particular time to be a voice of the unheard.”

    Lyor admits it was so obvious X had the “it” factor even his mum would be able to tell he was a star, “I’d like to say that if my mother was in the room, she’d pull me aside and tell me, ‘That’s the one!’ It was so obvious that you didn’t need to be an expert.”

    “The molecules in the room changed. All the other rappers ran like cockroaches to light. It was night-and-day. We were waiting there for over an hour. We didn’t know what we were there for, but when he walked in, we realized precisely what we were there for.”

    DMX died earlier this month (April 2021), a week after suffering a heart attack. He will be honored by his family, friends and fans at a memorial at the Barclays Center in New York on Saturday, April 24.

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    Past Students Say Professor of Rock ’n’ Roll Sexually Harassed Them

    Six former University of Michigan students have filed legal papers accusing a former lecturer of sexually harassing them and the school of not doing enough to protect them.During 16 years teaching at the University of Michigan, Bruce Conforth stocked his lectures with tales from a life filled with boldfaced names: He had rubbed elbows with Bob Dylan, played music alongside B.B. King, apprenticed for the abstract expressionist Willem de Kooning and befriended the poet Allen Ginsberg.Students clamored to enroll in his courses on blues music and the American counterculture, later raving about how he had changed their lives.A musician, scholar and founding curator of the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, Mr. Conforth was a riveting lecturer who, in his trademark black vest and jeans, could discuss everything from Buddhism to psychedelics, and who, in 2012, was chosen teacher of the year by students.“There was almost a celebrity-like aura around him,” said Amelia Brown, who took a Conforth class called “Beatniks, Hippies and Punks” in 2016. “It wasn’t a normal class. He would go on these long tangents about life and spirituality.”But there was a dark side to Mr. Conforth, according to Ms. Brown and other women who said the teacher used his charisma and, sometimes, Svengali-like manipulation to sexually harass his students.Six of the former Michigan students have filed court papers saying they plan to sue the school, asserting it failed to protect them from sexual harassment.  Erin Kirkland for The New York TimesIn 2008, one recent graduate complained to the university that Mr. Conforth, a lecturer in the American Culture Department, had propositioned her when she was a student. The university put him on formal notice but quietly resolved the complaint. Two more women came forward, though, in 2016, to report that Mr. Conforth had worked to engage them in sexual relationships when they were his students, and, in the midst of the university’s investigation, he agreed to quietly leave his faculty position.Now six former Michigan undergraduates — the three women who previously complained and three others — have filed court papers announcing their intention to sue him and the university, asserting he engaged in a litany of sexual misconduct and the school failed to protect them.“He should have been fired,” said Isabelle Brourman, one of the women. “But they allowed him to thrive. They allowed him to win awards.”Ms. Brourman says, according to the court papers, that Mr. Conforth pressured her into a series of sexual encounters, some of them in his campus office, and later, after she had graduated, raped her in his Ann Arbor apartment.A second former student, Ms. Brown, said she was pressured into a sexual encounter with Mr. Conforth after he told her he had feelings for her and pursued her for several weeks. A third woman said he aggressively kissed her. The other plaintiffs say Mr. Conforth propositioned them to have sexual relationships, at times sending them sexually-charged messages or emails and persisting even after they said no. One woman said he gave her a raccoon penis, suggesting it was a talisman.Mr. Conforth declined to discuss the accusations. “I’ve tried to move on with my life,” he said in a brief phone conversation. “This is a past issue.”The university said it handled the 2008 complaint against Mr. Conforth appropriately and set firm restrictions on his behavior. When the subsequent complaints came in, it said it took swift action to investigate and that Mr. Conforth would have faced dismissal proceedings if he hadn’t agreed to retire in early 2017.“You will note in the separation agreement that the university took immediate and lasting action to assure that Mr. Conforth would not be in any further contact with U-M students, even after his employment ended,” a university spokesman said.Sexual misconduct allegations at universities across the country have sparked calls for policies that hold faculty and student offenders accountable. Last year, Michigan fired David Daniels, an opera star and voice professor, after he and his husband were charged with sexually assaulting a singer.Also last year, the university reached a $9.25 million settlement with women who accused Martin Philbert, then the school’s provost, of sexual harassment.The university said it is constantly working to improve its sexual misconduct policies in a statement that cited a number of changes it has made in recent years.Mr. Conforth arrived at Michigan in 2001 with a doctorate in ethnomusicology from Indiana University and a résumé that included his work as the founding curator with the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame and Museum in Cleveland, which he left in 1993.Since leaving Michigan, Mr. Conforth, 70, has co-written an award-winning biography of the blues singer and guitarist Robert Johnson and helped narrate a Netflix documentary about the musician.While at Michigan, Mr. Conforth was so popular that students chose him as the winner of the “Golden Apple” teaching award in 2012.But four years earlier, Katherine McMahan, a recent university graduate, had told the school about a disturbing incident the previous fall. Ms. McMahan, then 22, said she had attended a blues concert connected to Mr. Conforth’s course and, at a bar after the concert, she said he cornered her outside the bathroom, put his hand around her waist, pulled her closer to him and asked her to come home with him to sleep over. She said she declined but that he persisted until she pushed him away. (Ms. McMahan is a New York Times employee who works outside the newsroom.)Katherine McMahan, left, and Isabelle Brourman, both accuse their former teacher, Bruce Conforth, of sexual misconduct.Kholood Eid for The New York TimesMs. McMahan later received an email from a Michigan official that said the university was taking steps that “it feels are likely to deter future behavior of this nature towards students.” University records, obtained through a Freedom of Information Act request, show that after McMahan’s complaint, the school had Mr. Conforth sign a “Last Chance” agreement, which stipulated requirements he would need to fulfill to avoid termination.Other former students recount similar experiences, though they did not report them to the university. Cassie McQuater said that in 2007, when she was 20, Mr. Conforth, who was not her teacher and whom she had met only briefly, began sending her emails, declaring his love. In one, she said, he included an erotic drawing of a man and a woman with her name at the bottom. When she eventually agreed to get dinner with him, he asked her to return home with him; she declined.Lauren Lambert, who said she plans to join the intended lawsuit, said that starting in 2011, while she was his student and afterward, Mr. Conforth sent her sexually charged messages, saying he had fantasies about her.Two women said that as part of the effort to engage with them sexually, Mr. Conforth had employed the ruse of suggesting he was a member of the so-called “Order of the Illuminati,” a secret society whose mysteries were popularized in Dan Brown’s novel “Angels & Demons.” The women, Ms. Brourman and her friend, Maya Crosman, said they believed he was responsible for emails they received, purportedly from Illuminati leadership, that recommended they engage in relationships with Mr. Conforth, whom the emails called the “Chosen One.”Ms. Crosman kept a copy of one of the emails — sent from an email address designed to be anonymous — in which a person who identified themselves as Grandmaster Setis recommends she return the “intensely profound love” that Mr. Conforth had for her.The women said they thought Mr. Conforth had the potential to be a kind of spiritual and artistic mentor, but then things grew strange. In legal papers filed in a Michigan court, Ms. Brourman said Mr. Conforth invited them to an arboretum on campus where he engaged in a mysterious ritual that involved cutting off pieces of their hair and giving Ms. Brourman a series of objects, including the raccoon penis, seeds and some kind of medallion. She was warned to keep them with her, or there would be “repercussions,” the court papers said.Both women said they received what appeared to be homemade horoscopes in which it was predicted they were romantically compatible with Mr. Conforth.Ms. Crosman said Mr. Conforth inundated her with messages online, declaring his love. One included a Pablo Neruda poem that said, “I crave your mouth, your voice, your hair.” At the end of the semester, she said he forcibly kissed her and stuck his tongue in her mouth during a visit to his office.The two women said they feared reporting their encounters to the university at the time.“We were trying to protect ourselves in ways where we didn’t have to insult him, we didn’t have to fight him,” Ms. Crosman said.Maya Crosman, left, and Cassie McQuater, said that Mr. Conforth inundated them with messages, declaring his love. Ms. Crosman said he aggressively kissed her.Joyce Kim for The New York TimesThe court papers say Brourman felt intimidated by the strange emails she received, including ones that directed her to “service” Mr. Conforth. In 2014, she said they had a sexual encounter in his office on campus. After that encounter, Ms. Brourman and Mr. Conforth met regularly for “spiritual lessons” that required sex beforehand, the papers said. Ms. Brourman said in an interview that at the time, she was confused and thought she might have feelings for Mr. Conforth, but in retrospect, she said she recognizes that she was being manipulated.In fall 2017, after she had graduated, Ms. Brourman said in court papers that Mr. Conforth raped her at his apartment in Ann Arbor. She did not report it, she said, because she feared retaliation, but in February filed a complaint with the police.The two women whose complaints played a role in Mr. Conforth’s departure from Michigan approached the university after learning about each other’s accounts. Shaina Mahler had been 22 in 2014 when she said Mr. Conforth, her favorite teacher, began sending her messages on Facebook. She was flattered at first, but then the messages escalated into expressions of how attracted he was to her.When Ms. Mahler told him that she was starting to feel “confused and anxious” about his messages, Mr. Conforth apologized and said they could be friends, writing, “Please please don’t ruin my life here.” But a few days later, Mr. Conforth sent her more sexually charged messages, saying he wanted to “kiss” and “touch” her, according to court papers.Ms. Mahler let it slide until two years later, when she spoke with Ms. Brown, who recounted a nearly identical experience of being pursued by Mr. Conforth. Ms. Brown, then 21, told him several times his advances were “inappropriate,” according to notes taken by a Title IX coordinator who interviewed her. But one day in his office, when he insisted they hug, they ended up kissing too, she said.That semester, their interactions escalated into a sexual encounter in his office, and Ms. Brown told the coordinator that, at first, she believed it was consensual. She acknowledged having feelings for Mr. Conforth but told the coordinator that she quickly became anxious and conflicted after their sexual encounter. She soon recognized, she said, that she had been manipulated, especially after learning from a friend — another student in his class at the time — that Mr. Conforth had left a note for her saying that he found her attractive.Ms. Brown and Ms. Mahler reported their interactions with Mr. Conforth to the university at the end of 2016 and he retired shortly thereafter.The university said its policy is to share the school’s investigative findings with complainants and that it could not comment on individual cases. But both of the women said that the university did not alert them to the outcome of its review until last year, when Ms. Mahler said she checked in after hearing complaints from other women.“I let it go for a while,” she said, “but I always wondered.”Sheelagh McNeill contributed research. More

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    Eminem Announces 'Shady Con' as His First NFT Collection

    WENN

    The Slim Shady announces his first non-fungible token collection which is inspired by his ‘passion as a vintage toy, comic book and trading card collector.’

    Apr 24, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Eminem will be dropping his first NFT collection on Sunday (25Apr21).

    The Stan rapper announced “Shady Con”, featuring original instrumental beats produced by Eminem himself specifically for the release, on Thursday. NFTs (non-fungible tokens) are an emerging market within blockchain where single-impression unique digital art and goods known as the ‘token’ can be sold.

    He explained in a statement, “I’ve been collecting since I was a kid, everything from comic books to baseball cards to toys, as well as every rap album on cassette I could get my hands on. Not much has changed for me as an adult…”

    “I’ve attempted to re-create some of those collections from that time in my life, and I know I’m not alone. I wanted to give this drop the same vibe of, ‘Oh, man I gotta get just that one or maybe even the whole set!’ ”

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    “It’s been a lot of fun coming up with ideas from my own collecting passion.”

    A description for the “Shady Con” digital drop, which is available from 6.30 pm ET, adds, “Shady Con provides Stans, fans, NFT enthusiasts and collectors ONE OPPORTUNITY to own a piece from this premier drop.”

    “Born from the convergence of blockchain technology, creative enthusiasm, and pandemic doldrums, this drop was inspired by Eminem’s passion as a vintage toy, comic book and trading card collector that traces back to his childhood days as just ‘plain old Marshall.’ ”

    The Weeknd, Kings of Leon, Grimes, Charli XCX, and Calvin Harris are among those who have released material via the format.

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    Glastonbury Fans Invited to Design and Send Their Flags for Livestream Event

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    The organizers of the British music festival have encouraged fans to create their own flags and send them for upcoming Live at Worthy Farm virtual celebration.

    Apr 23, 2021

    AceShowbiz –
    Glastonbury bosses have called on fans to design flags for the upcoming Live at Worthy Farm livestream event.

    The festival’s special concert will bring together performances from the likes of Coldplay, Haim, Damon Albarn, and Jorja Smith in what’s been described as a “journey through all of those spots that you know from Worthy Farm.”

    To make the event even more special, organisers want fans to make their own flags to feature in the one-off broadcast.

    On the festival’s official website, they called for designs to celebrate “diversity and equality across all communities,” “love,” “a cleaner, greener, fairer world,” “all colours of the rainbow,” and “freedom to protest.”

    They added, “We want them to be as homemade as possible – all artistic abilities are welcome, just be creative and get your craft on.”

    “They can be tie-dye, stitched, painted… anything! Just make them as bright and colourful as you can.

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    “Flags should be made of material – preferably cotton – and definitely not paper or cardboard. Please don’t glue / attach anything to them, especially not plastic.”

    “Please do not use glitter of any kind. Everything must be stitched and fully secured, as your flag could be flying in the wind.”

    People have been invited to send their flags to a special address in good time to arrive by 5 May (21).

    The livestream gig, which takes place 22 to 23 May, will also include performances from Wolf Alice, Kano, Michael Kiwanuka, and IDLES.

    Organiser Emily Eavis previously promised an “epic journey” for music-lovers tuning into the show.

    She said, “We are going to take you on a journey through all of those spots that you know from Worthy Farm – the woods, the railway line, the stone circle, the pyramid, and it’s going to build into this epic journey around the site into the night.”

    Fans wanting to submit a flag can find all the details at: glastonburyfestivals.co.uk.

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