More stories

  • in

    Good Charlotte Return With New Single to Mark 20th Anniversary of Debut Album

    Instagram

    Benji Madden and his bandmates are celebrating the two-decade anniversary of their self-titled studio album by dropping a new emotional track called ‘Last December’.

    Dec 20, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Good Charlotte have surprised fans with the release of their first new music in two years.
    The punk rock veterans have dropped the emotional track, “Last December”, to mark the 20th anniversary of their self-titled debut album.
    Benji Madden – who is joined by his twin Joel Madden, Paul Thomas, Billy Martin, and Dean Butterworth in the “I Just Wanna Live” group – says the song channels both the “joy and melancholy” of the holiday season.
    [embedded content]
    “2020 being the 20th anniversary of our self-titled debut album really made us feel like we wanted to release something for those fans who’ve gone on this journey with us,” he explains.

      See also…

    “The holidays can be a rough time of year – thinking of the ones we’ve lost and longing for moments that have passed us by is definitely a part of the joy and melancholy. For us, this song speaks to both sides of those holiday feelings and we hope it brings some solace to anyone who needs it.”
    Good Charlotte’s last studio album was 2018’s “Generation Rx”.
    Meanwhile, Benji previously compared the band to an “extremely valuable vintage care” that he takes “meticulous care of.”
    “Good Charlotte is an extremely beautiful, extremely valuable vintage car that I take meticulous care of, that I like driving on the weekends and that I’m very proud of,” he stated. “Old cars run forever if you take care of them.”
    His sibling added, “And you don’t let people put s**t on it, you don’t let people mistreat it and the more you shine it up, the more people look at it and the more valuable it becomes.”

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Big Sean Learns to Take Regular Breaks to Deal With His Mental Health

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Maren Morris Calls Off Tour, Focuses on Completing Third Album

    Instagram

    The ‘Girl’ singer is working on her next studio installment as she has been forced to scrap her upcoming tour because of the ongoing Covid-19 health crisis.

    Dec 20, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Maren Morris has pulled the plug on her planned RSVP Tour amid the pandemic.
    The “Girl” hitmaker had already postponed the jaunt due to coronavirus crisis and, in a statement on Friday (18Dec20), she confirmed the tour has been cancelled altogether due to the uncertainty over when music venues will be allowed to re-open again.
    “Hi Darlings,” wrote the 30-year-old. “There is so much hope with this vaccine being distributed in 2021, but we are still unsure of when we will be able to do the tour next year.”
    “With the prospect of, yet again, rescheduling half of the dates already becoming a reality, I have decided to cancel the RSVP tour,” the singer explained, before adding that customers with tickets will receive “a full refund from the point of purchase.”

      See also…

    However, it’s not all bad news for fans – the “My Church” singer went on to thank her followers for their “patience” and revealed that she filled up some of her recent downtime by writing new songs.
    “I am in the midst of working on my third record, so I hope we all can come together and enjoy live shows safely again soon,” she revealed, adding, “Love you so much, M.”
    Maren Morris released her sophomore set in 2019.
    This year, she received numerous accolades including Female Artist of the Year at the Academy of Country Music Awards, Favorite Female Country Artist at the American Music Awards, Top Female Country Artist at the Billboard Music Awards, and Song of the Year, Single of the Year, & Female Vocalist of the year at the Country Music Association Awards.

    You can share this post!

    Related Posts More

  • in

    David Guetta to Stage New Year's Eve Charity Concert From Paris

    Instagram

    Having launched the ‘United at Home’ concert series early on in the COVID-19 shutdown, the ‘Titanium’ hitmaker is going to host a gig that will benefit UNICEF and Les Restos du Coeur.

    Dec 19, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Superstar DJ David Guetta is kicking off 2021 with a big charity concert broadcast from a secret location in Paris, France.
    The “Titanium” hitmaker will stage his latest United at Home series on 31 December for UNICEF and Les Restos du Coeur, a local charity distributing food to those in need during the coronavirus pandemic.
    The Frenchman’s gig will be filmed by officials at the Amsterdam, Holland-based Insight TV, and made available on all of the network’s global platforms at midnight on New Year’s Eve.
    “With most of the world experiencing the holidays while not being able to celebrate with friends and family, Insight TV wanted to give our viewers a reason to dance right in their own homes,” Insight TV executive Arun Maljaars told Variety.

      See also…

    “It will be (a) spectacular feast for the eyes and ears as David Guetta performs an electrifying set accompanied by the biggest light show the world has ever seen,” it’s claimed.
    Guetta launched the United at Home concert series early on in the COVID shutdown, performing in undisclosed outdoor locations in Miami, Florida and New York. The events have so far raised $1.5 million (£1.1 million) for a variety of good causes, including the World Health Organization and Feeding America.
    It’s not the only gig Guetta has lined up for New Year’s Eve – he will also be performing a virtual set for Tomorrowland’s end-of-year bash.
    The festivities will begin at 8 P.M. and run until 3 A.M. in all 27 time zones. Tickets are available here: https://www.tomorrowland.com/home/.

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Gabourey Sidibe Shares Pic of Fiance’s NSFW Proposal

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Fans Pissed at Lil Wayne for Allegedly Selling Drake and Nicki Minaj's Masters

    WENN/B.Dowling

    In the ‘Bling Bling’ rapper’s former manager’s lawsuit against him, it’s revealed that the Canadian star and the ‘Anaconda’ hitmaker’s masters were sold to Universal Music Group as part of a $100M deal.

    Dec 19, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Lil Wayne isn’t done taking the heat after coming under fire earlier this year for his public support to Donald Trump. No longer talking about politics, the rapper is now catching flak after it’s reported that he sold Drake and Nicki Minaj’s masters.
    Weezy reportedly sold Young Money’s masters to Universal Music Group for $100 million this summer. In his former manager Ronald E. Sweeney’s multi-million dollar lawsuit against the Young Money CEO filed in California’s Superior Court on December 10, it’s revealed that the rights to some of Drake and Nicki’s records were among those included in the $100M deal last June.
    According to Music Business Worldwide, the deal was for Young Money’s entire catalog of masters including Drake and Nicki. In addition to Wayne’s own catalog, the deal reportedly includes Drake’s hit albums such as “Take Care”, “Nothing Was the Same” and “Views”, up until 2018’s “Scorpion”, his last project under Young Money/Cash Money.

      See also…

    As part of the acquisition, UMG reportedly now also owns the rights to Nicki’s albums “Pink Friday”, “The Pinkprint” and “Queen”, as well as her most recent single “Yikes”, which were released under Young Money/Cash Money. Another report, however, claims that the deal likely only includes collaborative joints between Wayne and these artists on Young Money, not their individual catalogs.
    After news of the sale Drake and Nicki’s catalogs surfaced, many were pissed at Wayne. “F**king with Trump got Lil Wayne selling Drake and Nicki’s masters,” one person alleged of what led to the “Lollipop” hitmaker made such deal. Another slammed him, “Wayne couldn’t release his own music for years but we’re expected to believe he had full control and ownership of Drake and Nicki’s masters? Give me a f**king break.”
    A third person wondered, “Why Wayne aint give Nicki and Drake a chance to buy they own masters.” Someone else listed a number of “HORRENDOUS” things that Weezy has done so far, including “endorsed Trump,” “left by girlfriend,” “plead guilty to a federal gun charge,” “caught with heroin on him,” “sold his masters” and “sued for $20 million by manager.”

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Kat Von D Purchases Indiana’s Historic House to Escape From ‘Tyrannical’ California Government

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Fiona Apple Has Thought About Boycotting Grammys Due to Dr. Luke Nomination

    Instagram

    While happy she is up for three awards at the 2021 ceremony, the ‘Criminal’ singer could not get her head over the fact that the controversial producer is vying for the Record of the Year prize.

    Dec 19, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Singer Fiona Apple has taken aim at Recording Academy chiefs for nominating controversial producer Dr. Luke for the prestigious Record of the Year prize at the 2021 awards.
    Luke has been locked in a nasty legal battle with pop star Ke$ha since 2014, when she accused him of sexual and emotional abuse – allegations he has vehemently denied.
    Kesha was invited to perform her moving track “Praying”, believed to be about her reported ordeal with Luke, at the 2018 Grammy Awards, but now the producer is nominated for his work on Doja Cat’s “Say So”, under his pseudonym Tyson Trax – and Apple, a rape survivor, cannot believe the hypocrisy.
    “Really, Dr Luke is nominated? They had (Kesha) up there singing Praying, and now they’re gonna go: ‘Oh, but it’s Tyson Trax!’,” she told The Guardian.
    Despite her Grammys criticism, Apple, who is up for three prizes at the upcoming ceremony, is excited about having all-female acts to compete against for Best Rock Performance.

      See also…

    “I immediately had this feeling: I wish I was in a room with these ladies and we could celebrate. I felt really nice for a second,” she shared, but insists that joy didn’t last long as she was drawn back to the Kesha/Luke controversy.
    “I keep going back to them putting Kesha on stage like, ‘We believe you’ – and I believe her – then two years later, f**king Tyson Trax. Not to go back to that word, but it’s bulls**t,” she fumed.
    “The feeling of wanting to celebrate with these women was genuine. But I should have that feeling anyway. I don’t know if anybody who’s nominated can help having the thought: What would I do if I won? My vision was that I would just get up there with a sledgehammer and I wouldn’t say anything, I would take the Grammy and smash it into enough pieces to share and I would invite all the ladies up.”
    “My second thought was I wonder if I can get all these ladies to boycott this s**t because of Dr Luke.”
    Recording Academy officials have yet to respond to Apple’s comments.

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Vanessa Bryant’s Mother Claps Back Amid Lawsuit Drama: I Do Not Want the Publicity

    Related Posts More

  • in

    Taylor Swift Makes History as 'Evermore' Debuts at No. 1 in U.K.

    Instagram

    The ‘Cardigan’ singer becomes the first artist after David Bowie to top the U.K. albums chart with two albums in the same year following the release of ‘Folklore’ sister album.

    Dec 19, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Taylor Swift has become the first artist since 2016 to top the U.K. albums chart with two different projects in the same calendar year.
    “Evermore” has debuted at number one, just five months after the pop superstar achieved the same feat with her surprise July release, “Folklore”.
    David Bowie was the last performer to pull off the double victory with “Blackstar” in January 2016, and “Best of Bowie” just weeks later, following his death from cancer.
    “Evermore” earns Swift her sixth U.K. chart-topper, becoming only the fourth female artist to boast such success, following Madonna, who has 12 number ones, Kylie Minogue, who has eight, and Barbra Streisand, who has six.
    Back in the countdown, Neil Diamond’s “Classic Diamonds” orchestral compilation climbs to number two, ahead of Michael Ball and Alfie Boe’s “Together at Christmas”.

      See also…

    Meanwhile, Mariah Carey classic “All I Want for Christmas Is You” has held on for a second week at number one – 26 years after its original release.
    The holiday favourite keeps “Last Christmas” by Wham! at two, and Swift song “Willow” debuts at three.
    Two other “Evermore” tracks, “Champagne Problems” and “No Body, No Crime” featuring Haim, also enter the countdown at 15 and 19, respectively.
    Taylor Swift described the creative process of making “Evermore” as “pure” as she got rid of her usual “checklist.”
    “I threw it away,” she said, “and I definitely could have gone into the pandemic thinking, ‘I’ve got to wait for everything to open up so I can do things exactly the way that I am used to doing them.’ But then about three days in, I thought, ‘Wait, this could be an opportunity for me to do things in a way I haven’t ever done them before. What would my work sound like if I took away all of my fear-based check listing that I have inflicted on myself?’ So I guess – I know the answer now.”

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Jerry Harris Pleads Not Guilty to Child Sex Abuse Charges

    Related Posts More

  • in

    The Year in Improvised Music: ‘Everything’s Changing. So the Music Should.’

    #masthead-section-label, #masthead-bar-one { display: none }The Best of 2020Best ComedyBest TV ShowsBest BooksBest MoviesBest AlbumsAdvertisementContinue reading the main storySupported byContinue reading the main storyThe Year in Improvised Music: ‘Everything’s Changing. So the Music Should.’The pandemic compressed live music onto screens, and Black Lives Matter protests brought it back to the streets. What will it all look like, and sound like, in 2021?Norman Edwards and Endea Owens playing outdoors. Ms. Owens helped put together bands to perform at protests.Credit…Anthony ArtisDec. 17, 2020When concerts and in-person gatherings shut down this spring, livestreamed shows quickly started to feel like a glorified last resort. I found myself avoiding them. But a Facebook video caught my eye one day in June, of the trombonist Craig Harris performing at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden. Accompanied by the keyboardist Pete Drungle, framed by a flowering grove and a trellis, he played “Breathe,” a suite of concise and soothing music that sounds like the sum of Mr. Harris’s experiences on the New York scene since the 1970s.He had written “Breathe” after Eric Garner’s killing by New York police in 2014; it was his reflection on the notion of breath as a great equalizer, and as the source of Mr. Harris’s own powers as a trombonist. But at the start of this video, he turns to those affected by Covid-19. He offers the suite as “a sonic reflection for those who have passed, and those who are born,” Mr. Harris says. “We have to think about the lives of the people who are born in this period now. That’s a whole thing, the beginning and the end.”The performance was taped in May, before George Floyd’s killing in Minneapolis and its nightmarish resonance with Garner’s death. By the time Mr. Harris’s video was released in June, protesters were constantly in the streets, and the suite’s original message had become painfully relevant again. But even in this new light, the poise and sensitivity that Mr. Harris had intentionally brought to this performance didn’t feel out of place.For any lover of live performances — but especially jazz and improvised music — 2020 will be remembered, joylessly, as the year of the stream. Musicians have done their best with what they’ve had, usually by leaning into intimacy; we saw a lot of artists’ bedrooms this year. But it was actually in the moments when musicians zoomed out — when they made our perspective bigger, and connected this difficult moment with a greater sense of time — that improvised music did its most necessary work.With concerts impossible, the vocalist and interdisciplinary artist Gelsey Bell assembled “Cairns,” a remarkable audio tour of Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn; it’s part philosophy talk and part experimental music composition, built of Ms. Bell’s overdubbed vocal improvisations and the sounds of the cemetery as she walks.Green-Wood is a majestic place, and there is something robust and alive about it, even though generations of history lie in its soil. “As I started making it, I was really thinking about our relation to the land and the history it holds, and then where we find ourselves now,” Ms. Bell said of “Cairns” in an interview. “To be connected to the land you live on is to be connected to both its history and the other people that you’re sharing space with.”On the hourlong recording, Ms. Bell tells of various little-known but significant figures, using their histories to illuminate what she calls “the apocalyptic foundations of this place.” And she gives us the histories of the trees, instructing us to listen to the ways they sing to each other, and will continue to after we’re gone.Hiking up a hill, Ms. Bell and her collaborator Joseph White turn the sounds of her breathing and walking into a kind of mulchy, rhythmic music. “Because of breath, we’ll never forget how stuck in time we are, how mortal we are,” she says, making the word “mortal” sound like a good thing.It wasn’t impossible to make music via stream that really pulled people together — just rare — and on this front, couples had an advantage. The week that the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommended all concerts be put on hold, the vocalist Cécile McLorin Salvant and the pianist Sullivan Fortner propped up a camera beside the piano in their living room and broadcast a set of music via Facebook to thousands of viewers. The comments section turned into a chattery town square, full of nervous and grateful people unsure of what the coming months would bring.The bassist Dezron Douglas and the harpist Brandee Younger started performing duets from home every week, ultimately collecting them in a disarming album, “Force Majeure,” released this month. The saxophonist Ingrid Laubrock and the drummer Tom Rainey got in the habit of recording their wide-ranging living room improvisations and publishing them on Bandcamp, in a series that continues under the name “Stir Crazy.”A listener taking in Gelsey Bell’s “Cairns,” an audio tour of Green-Wood Cemetery in Brooklyn.Credit…Sasha Arutyunova for The New York TimesMs. Bell said she thought “about our relation to the land and the history it holds, and then where we find ourselves now.”Credit…Sasha Arutyunova for The New York TimesWorking alone, the clarinetist Ben Goldberg also started posting daily solo recordings in March on a Bandcamp page labeled “Plague Diary”; it now has nearly 200 entries. Listen for long enough and the tracks of overdubbed instrumentals and low, repetitive rhythms start to run together, like the hazy interminable feeling of existing at home amid lockdown.The saxophonist Steve Lehman swung in another direction, releasing a less-than-10-minute album, “Xenakis and the Valedictorian,” featuring snippets of exercises and experiments that he had recorded on his iPhone, practicing in his car each night so that his wife and daughter could have peace in the house.Continuing to perform during the pandemic — near impossible as it often was — was both a creative and a financial imperative for improvisers, many of whom saw all of their upcoming performances canceled in March. But newly liberated from obligation, inspired by the movement sweeping the country, many also began to organize.Much good critical attention was paid this year in the music press to the ways that our listening habits have had to adjust to lockdown, and to how performances have changed. But what about the institutions that also fell quiet — especially the schools and major arts nonprofits, which have perpetuated massive racial and economic disparities in access to the music? Will they all look the same when things come back online?The trombonist Craig Harris performed “Breathe” at the Brooklyn Botanic Garden in May.Credit…Brooklyn Botanic GardenMusicians across the world came together via Zoom to organize the We Insist! collective to address these questions, eventually coming up with a list of demands to promote racial equity in major educational institutions and philanthropic groups in the jazz world. A group of artists of historically underrepresented gender identities came together in the Mutual Mentorship for Musicians collective, striking a creative blow against patriarchy in jazz. And as protests overtook streets nationwide, jazz musicians were often there.The bassist Endea Owens showed up on the second day of protests in New York back in May, she said in an interview. She almost immediately felt a need to contribute music, and she helped put together bands that played daily at demonstrations over the next three weeks. “We were out there for two to three weeks, walking from Washington Square Park to the Barclays Center, just playing,” she said. “That created a ripple effect of something creative, something positive. You felt like you had to fight for your lives.”In Harlem, where she lives, Ms. Owens started a monthly series of masked, socially distanced cookout concerts. Using donations as well as money from her own pocket, she has handed out 100 free meals at each one, while paying underemployed jazz musicians to perform. As a member of Jon Batiste’s Stay Human, the house band for “The Late Show With Stephen Colbert,” Ms. Owens has been the rare jazz musician this year who could count on a steady paycheck.But without nightly gigs, she has still had an excess of downtime. Now that she has made connections with other organizers and mutual aid groups in the area, she is thinking about how to continue that effort into the future, even if the usual work opportunities for musicians come back.“There’s a big opportunity to make jazz feel more familiar and make it feel more accessible, where anyone can go to these shows,” Ms. Owens said. “I don’t even think it’s possible to go back to the way we did things. Everything’s changing. So the music should. The way we perform, the way we approach it, the places where we have this music.”AdvertisementContinue reading the main story More

  • in

    Paul McCartney Might Back Out of 2021 Glastonbury as He Sees the Event as Covid-19 'Super-Spreader'

    Instagram/Mary McCartney

    The 78-year-old musician admits he is reluctant to take the stage at the upcoming Glastonbury music festival over coronavirus concerns as he sees the event as a potential super-spreader.

    Dec 19, 2020
    AceShowbiz – Paul McCartney is reluctant to headline Britain’s Glastonbury music festival in 2021 over fears surrounding the coronavirus.
    The Beatles legend, 78, had been due to top the bill at the musical extravaganza this June (20), before it was cancelled due to the Covid-19 pandemic – and the “Hey Jude” hitmaker doesn’t expect next year’s festival to take place either.
    He said, “Glastonbury, where you’ve got over 100,000 people packed into a field? That’s a super-spreader.”
    Despite admitting they are “a long way” from being able to say if there will definitely be a festival in 2021, Glastonbury co-organiser Emily Eavis has insisted bosses are doing “everything” in their power to try and get the Worthy Farm music extravaganza to take place next year.

      See also…

    The 50th anniversary of the iconic event, which was sadly cancelled due to the coronavirus pandemic this summer (20), was due to be headlined by Sir Paul McCartney, Taylor Swift, and Kendrick Lamar.
    Despite being forced off the stage, the rocker has been busy making music and recently released a sequel to his classic albums, 1970’s “McCartney” and 1980’s “McCartney II”, by making a record in which he wrote and produced all the songs, as well as singing and playing all the instruments.
    Reflecting on the newly-released McCartney III, he told The Sun newspaper, “We were shocked to find ourselves in the middle of this but, for some creative people, it gave us unexpected time.”
    “I should have been rehearsing for my shows, culminating in Glastonbury, and suddenly all of that was knocked out, so I was able to do some recording,” he recalled. “I was just making music purely for me that no one really was going to hear, except me and my family. I suddenly had about 11 or 12 tracks, not knowing what to do with them… but then the penny dropped.”
    “I thought of McCartney I and II. I’d played all the instruments on those, which put this in the same class, so this should be McCartney III. I’d found a place for it.”

    You can share this post!

    Next article
    Gal Gadot Confirms She’s Included in Very Thorough ‘Justice League’ Investigation

    Related Posts More