Showing posts with label Music News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Music News. Show all posts

Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Paul McCartney to open new Joint in Las Vegas

LOS ANGELES (Billboard) – Paul McCartney will open the Hard Rock Hotel & Casino's new Joint in Las Vegas on April 19. Motley Crue closed the old Joint last week.

Tickets go on sale February 14 at the Hard Rock Hotel box office and through ticketmaster.com. McCartney will also headline the first day of the Coachella Valley Music & Arts Festival on April 17 in the southern California city of Indio.

The new 4,007-capacity Joint will be twice the size of the old venue, which was built in 1995 and will be turned into casino space.

Rihanna Postpones Show, Police Continue Probe

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Singer Rihanna postponed a scheduled concert in Malaysia on Tuesday as Los Angeles police continued their probe of an attack by R&B star Chris Brown on a woman widely believed to be the pop songstress.

Malaysia-based Pineapple Concerts said in a statement on its website that "in light of recent events involving Rihanna" a new date for the concert will be set within two weeks.

In Los Angeles, police presented the case against Brown to prosecutors, but were asked to conduct further investigation, said Sandi Gibbons, a spokeswoman for the L.A. District Attorney's Office.


Mark Geragos, the celebrity attorney representing Brown, declined to comment.

Police have not publicly said that Rihanna, whose hit songs include "Umbrella" and "Disturbia," was the victim of Brown's attack early Sunday morning ahead of the Grammy awards, where they were both scheduled to perform.

But unnamed police sources have told the Los Angeles Times that Rihanna was and that she was cooperating with police.

In recent days, her publicist has issued only one statement, which said: "Rihanna is well. Thank you for concern and support."

Brown, 19, has been arrested and charged with making criminal threats. He is currently free on bail.

The incident occurred in Brown's car, and celebrity websites and magazines have said Brown left the scene and police found Rihanna, 20, suffering from a bloody nose, split lip and bite marks in the vehicle. She was taken to Cedars-Sinai Medical Center in Los Angeles, but later released.

E! Online reported that a 21st birthday celebration planned for the Barbados-born singer in New York had also been canceled.

The National Basketball League said Brown had withdrawn from a celebrity game scheduled for this weekend as part of the NBA all-star game. Brown's hit songs include "Forever" and "Kiss Kiss."

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte and Eric Walsh)

Thursday, February 5, 2009

UK Metal Band Judas Priest Seeking First Grammy

LONDON (Billboard) – Could it be third-time lucky for Judas Priest?

Some 35 years into its career, the veteran metal band will vie for a pair of Grammys at the music industry's top honors in Los Angeles on Sunday. It will compete in the hard rock category for "Visions" and metal category for "Nostradamus," a pair of tunes from its 16th studio album, "Nostradamus."

Previously nominated in 1991 and 1999, the band has yet to win a Grammy. "Hopefully we might get one this time 'round," guitarist Glenn Tipton says. "We're confident we should win, but you never know."

Judas Priest's Sony BMG label puts sales of "Nostradamus" at 500,000 units worldwide; that includes 100,000 logged by Nielsen SoundScan in the United States.


Tipton says Judas Priest is happy to stand alongside fellow Grammy-nominated Brits like Leona Lewis, Radiohead and Coldplay.

"That's something we should all be proud of," he says. "If it's flying the flag for Britain, that's a good thing."

Reuters/Billboard

Miley Cyrus "Goofy Face" Photo Taken Out Of Context

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – Disney teen idol Miley Cyrus has said she was making a goofy face when she made slant-eye poses in a personal photograph with friends, and was not making fun of Asians.

Cyrus, 16, was responding on Thursday to demands from an Asian-American group that she apologize for the snapshot which surfaced on the Internet this week, and in a blog posted on her official Web site, she said she's becoming a media target.

The OCA, a national organization that promotes the welfare of Asian Pacific Americans, had accused Cyrus of taunting and mocking Asians when she and a group of friends pulled their eyes sideways in a photo. One of the group was Asian.

"In NO way was I making fun of any ethnicity! I was simply making a goofy face. When did that become newsworthy?," Cyrus said in a blog posting at www.mileyworld.com.


She said she was sorry if people "looked at those pics and took them wrong and out of context" but she did not apologize.

"It seems someone is trying to make something out of nothing to me. If that would of been anyone else, it would of been overlooked! I definitely feel like the press is trying to make me out as the new 'BAD GIRL'!"

Cyrus, best known as the star of the Disney Channel show "Hannah Montana", said she felt that the media was focusing on her since pop star Britney Spears had turned her life around.

"I feel like now that Britney (Spears) is back on top of her game again, they need someone to pick on! Lucky me!," Cyrus said.

Cyrus, one of the biggest teen idols in the world, apologized to fans last year for a Vanity Fair photo shoot which showed her apparently wearing little but a satin bedsheet. She also came under fire in 2008 for personal pictures showing her in her underwear.

(Reporting by Jill Serjeant; Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)

Grammy's Top Prize Brings Sales Windfall

LOS ANGELES (Billboard) – Many artists dream of "packing out stadiums or selling a bazillion records," says Antonio "L.A." Reid, chairman of Island Def Jam Music Group. But to Reid there's a more important achievement. "I still hold the Grammys as the highest honor an artist can win."

On Sunday, Coldplay, Lil Wayne, Ne-Yo, Robert Plant & Alison Krauss and Radiohead will vie for the album of the year prize at the 51st annual Grammy Awards in Los Angeles.

As in years past, Grammy nominations can help boost artist awareness and album sales. Last year, in the days following his nomination for album of the year, Herbie Hancock's Joni Mitchell tribute "River: The Joni Letters" experienced an 80% sales increase. A week after its surprise win, "River" exploded 967% to 54,000 copies sold. It peaked at No. 5 on the Billboard 200, the jazz legend's best sales week since Nielsen SoundScan began tracking data in 1991.

Similarly, in the week following Plant & Krauss' nomination for "Raising Sand," the Rounder release -- which also garnered nods in four other categories -- had an 88% boost in sales. The duo's first collaborative album has now sold more than 1.1 million copies in the United States, according to SoundScan.

Rounder GM Sheri Sands doesn't expect the sales to stop there. "I anticipate when they win that we will see somewhere in the neighborhood of a 1,000% increase," Sands says. Last year Plant & Krauss received a best pop collaboration with vocals Grammy for the track "Gone Gone Gone."

Nick Gatfield, EMI Music president of A&R for the United Kingdom and North America, says Coldplay's nod for "Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends" (Capitol) could help expose additional material on the album. Its biggest-selling track, "Viva La Vida," has sold 2.7 million downloads, according to SoundScan.

"Sometimes when you have a song that big, it's very hard for the other material to push on through," Gatfield says. "This will give an opportunity to get more in-depth into the album and hear beyond just 'Viva La Vida' about how great this record is."

Coldplay's set debuted at No. 1 on the Billboard 200 and was the second-best seller of 2008, behind Lil Wayne's "Tha Carter III," with 2.1 million copies. With seven nominations, Coldplay is also up for record of the year and best rock album. "What Coldplay have always delivered is songs that touch people in many territories, lyrically and musically," Parlophone president of A&R labels Miles Leonard says.

Then there's Lil Wayne, who leads the field with eight nominations stemming from "Tha Carter III," which is at 2.8 million to date. The set sold slightly more than 1 million units in its first week of release last June.

"Not too many people get a chance to do it like that," Cash Money president/CEO Ronald "Slim" Williams says. "I always said that we would do million-plus records, and people would look at me like I was crazy."

Meanwhile, Ne-Yo's album of the year nomination for "Year of the Gentleman" will come in handy for future promotional efforts, according to Reid, but Def Jam is more focused on getting the slick-dressing R&B artist a performance slot on the awards show.

"That would be more important to me, because his fans draw from the emotional connection, and that's the driver that really sends people to the stores," Reid says. "Year of the Gentleman," which has sold 731,000 copies, is also up for best contemporary R&B album.

TBD Records co-founder Phil Costello says label staffers were "picking up ourselves off the floor" after discovering that Radiohead's critically acclaimed "In Rainbows" had been nominated for album of the year. The British rock outfit astonished the music industry in October 2007 after announcing that it would allow fans to name their own price for the digital purchase of the set.

"I was afraid people would look at it as an old record, even though we didn't street it until January 1, 2008," Costello says. "I was also wondering how the Recording Academy would view the way that the band delivered it, frankly." The physical release of "In Rainbows" has sold 654,000 U.S. copies.

Reuters/Billboard

Tuesday, February 3, 2009

Nickelback Leads Noms For Juno Awards

TORONTO (Hollywood Reporter) – Canadian rock group Nickelback led the musical pack Tuesday, picking up five nominations for the 38th annual Juno Awards, Canada's top music honors.

The Alberta rockers received nominations for best single, best group, best producer and best album of the year.

Nickelback also will compete for the Juno fan choice award against Celine Dion and Hedley -- both of whom secured three nominations each -- plus Feist and the Lost Fingers.

Other multiple nominees unveiled Tuesday at a Toronto press conference include Montreal-based Sam Roberts, who earned four nominations including best artist of the year.


The international album of the year award, based on retail album sales in Canada, will see AC/DC's "Black Ice" and Coldplay's "Viva La Vida" go up against Metallica's "Death Magnetic," Jack Johnson's "Sleep Through the Static" and Guns N' Roses' "Chinese Democracy."

The 2009 Juno Awards will air live March 29 on CTV from Vancouver.

Reuters/Hollywood Reporter

Cuban Who Banned Beatles Has Died

HAVANA (Reuters) – The man who banned the Beatles from the communist-run island's radio and television stations has died, state television said on Tuesday.

Jorge "Papito" Serguera, who at the time was president of the Cuban Institute of Radio and Television, pulled Beatles music from the airwaves in the 1970s even though he later admitted he enjoyed listening to it in private.

Serguera, who was 76 when he died, said in a 2001 interview he was following orders from high government officials who viewed the British band's music as a threat to the revolution.

But he was viewed as an architect of a general cultural crackdown that dampened dissent and marginalized many for their beliefs or sexuality.

"There were national leaders who were against, not them (the Beatles), but the so-called modern music ... there was incredible pressure," he told Ernesto Juan Castellanos, author of "John Lennon in Havana with a little help from my friend."

Today, Beatles music is played on the Cuban airwaves and one of Havana's minor landmarks is a statue of Lennon sitting on a park bench.

Download Mp3 Music Beatles - John Lennon

Serguera fought in the 1959 revolution that toppled dictator Fulgencio Batista, then worked alongside Ernesto "Che" Guevara as a prosecutor in controversial trials that condemned to death hundreds of Batista collaborators.

His appearance on television in 2006 provoked protests from intellectuals still angry about his 1970s actions.

(Reporting by Esteban Israel; editing by Jeff Franks)

Elton John To Close Las Vegas Show

LAS VEGAS – Elton John is playing his final notes on the red piano in Las Vegas.

Promoters say the pop singer will close his Las Vegas Strip show, "The Red Piano," on April 22.

The show made its debut in February 2004 at The Colosseum theater at Caesars Palace. After initially signing on for 75 shows, John's engagement was extended.

The casino says the closing show will be the 241st performance.

The offbeat production blends the singer's top hits with elaborate video montages created by photographer and director David LaChappelle.


Tickets for the final engagement go on sale Thursday. John's show alternates with other Colosseum headline acts, including Bette Midler and Cher.

A casino spokeswoman said there was no word on a replacement.

Jonas Brothers Visiting CW With Concert Film Peek

LOS ANGELES – Love them or not, the Jonas Brothers just keep popping up.

The CW network says the singers will host a night of programming Feb. 10 that includes the dramas "90210" and "Privileged." They'll provide a sneak peek of their new 3-D concert film based on their "Burning Up" tour.

Fans looking for a musical performance will get a clip of the group performing the hit song "Tonight."

Last month, the Jonas Brothers performed at the White House for presidential daughters Malia and Sasha Obama and at a children's inaugural concert.

Britney Spears Sued By Former "Manager"

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) – The former self-styled manager of Britney Spears sued the pop star and her parents on Tuesday, accusing them of slander and failing to pay his fees.

Sam Lutfi, Spears' constant companion in late 2007 at the height of her personal and professional meltdown, filed the lawsuit in Los Angeles Superior Court after a renewed flurry of legal moves against him.

His lawsuit names Britney Spears, her father and mother Jamie and Lynne Spears, and alleges libel, defamation, battery, intentional infliction of emotional distress and breach of contract.


Lufti claimed Jamie Spears punched him in the chest in January 2008 and says Lynne Spears damaged his reputation in her 2008 memoir "Through The Storm," in which she claimed Lutfi had over-medicated her daughter.

He is seeking unspecified damages.

The lawsuit was filed four days after Jamie Spears obtained a restraining order against Lutfi and Spears' former boyfriend, photographer Adnan Ghalib, ordering them to stay away from the singer and her family.

Britney Spears' spokeswoman was not available to comment.

The legal sparring followed months of relative peace on the Spears front after a year of bizarre behavior including Britney shaving her head and bouncing in and out of rehab.

Spears, 27, has since staged a comeback with a new album in December and a U.S. and British tour due to start in March.

Jamie Spears was granted temporary control of his daughter's personal affairs in February 2008. He obtained a restraining order against Lutfi but later dropped it when Lutfi agreed to voluntarily keep his distance.

Last week lawyers argued that Lutfi and Ghalib had tried to disrupt the agreement and a new order was granted.

(Reporting by Alex Dobuzinskis: editing by Jill Serjeant and Todd Eastham)

Monday, February 2, 2009

Streisand Talks 'Yentl,' New CD And Politics

NEW YORK – Barbra Streisand remembers the buzz generated before she started filming the musical "Yentl," and it wasn't particularly good.

Despite her superstar status and two Oscars (one best actress trophy, another for composing) she recalls hearing negative comments about whether she could pull off the Herculean task of starring, directing, co-writing and producing the period piece about a Jewish woman who disguises herself as a man to pursue an education.

"Women being actresses, somehow, in certain people's minds, in executives' minds, it's a frivolous job," she said in phone interview. "When you start to handle millions of dollars and production, that probably scared them."

The movie's success should have allayed those fears — "Yentl" garnered Oscar nominations and two Golden Globes. Now, 25 years later, the 66-year-old Streisand is reminiscing about what it took to get the movie made in this week's DVD release. The two-disc set comes with special features like rehearsal scenes and Streisand's commentary.

It's not the only project Streisand is working on these days. She's finishing an upcoming CD being produced by best-selling jazz singer Diana Krall, and she regularly keeps busy with her Web site, which includes the liberal Democrat's musings on politics.

The Associated Press: What was the most challenging part of making "Yentl"?

Streisand: I think it was just getting it made, selling it in America. Because once I came to England, things were really wonderful. They had no fear of a woman being in a powerful position because they had a queen and the prime minister was Margaret Thatcher. Being a woman director there didn't seem to scare them. They were the most supportive, helpful, wonderful group of people. I'm very grateful for that. It wasn't until I came back to America it was an odd thing, directing this movie, before I started and after I finished, and that's really fascinating to me. And look how many years it's taken to even conceive of a women being president in the United States? At that time, you couldn't even conceive of a woman being president of the United States, until two years ago ... but times have changed.

AP: You were a very vocal critic of former President George W. Bush, but said he was very gracious after he gave you a kiss during the Kennedy Center Honors.

Streisand: It still doesn't change my mind about his politics, the ruination of our country. But, he was very disarming and very nice and kind of fun with it.

AP: I didn't see you at the Obama inauguration.

Streisand: I was supposed to go, I was asked to go, but I'm in the middle of this recording ... and I just couldn't go. It was the most thrilling thing to watch this man Obama, Barack Obama, become the president of United States. It's such a wonderful thing for our country and our world. He's so intelligent and so smart, and that is such a change, and such a relief.

AP: Diana Krall is producing your new album. Is she also singing on it?

Streisand: I'm trying to convince her to sing with me, but she's resisting it. She plays the piano for me on several songs, but it's not over yet. I'm still working on her to try to do a duet with me. ... We have to find the right song.

AP: When do you plan to return to film?

Streisand: I'd like to get back to directing. There's something I've been working on for many many years and it's kind of almost time to get back into my directing role and there also is possible a sequel to "Meet the Fockers."

AP: Your stepson, Josh Brolin, is an Oscar nominee this year.

Streisand: Isn't that great? It's so great for him because now win or lose, he is an Oscar-nominated actor, and it's wonderful to get the recognition of your peers.

AP: Are you going to be involved in this year's Oscars?

Streisand: Doubt it. I like to watch from home, eat pizza ... I cuddle up on my couch.

Flamin' Groovies Members To Reunite For Spring Show

NEW YORK (Billboard) – Flamin' Groovies principals Cyril Jordan and Roy Loney will reunite for the first time since 1971 at the eighth Ponderosa Stomp festival, to be held April 28-29 at New Orleans' House of Blues.

The Flamin' Groovies formed in San Francisco in 1965 and set a template for the nascent power pop movement with their 1969 debut, "Supersnazz," and its 1970 follow-up, "Flamingo."

Loney left the Flamin' Groovies after the album "Teenage Head," and the Groovies were largely dormant until 1976, when Chris Wilson replaced Loney. That year's album "Shake Some Action" spawned a cult classic single of the same name, and was the group's only release to ever reach the Billboard 200 (No. 142).

The band was intermittently active until disbanding for good in 1992. Jordan now plays in the band Magic Christian. At Ponderosa Stomp, Jordan and Loney will be backed by New York rock outfit the A-Bones.

In recent years, Ponderosa Stomp has engineered several unlikely reunions, including the first performance in 40 years from Texas garage band the Green Fuz and the teaming of Howlin' Wolf musicians Jody Williams, Hubert Sumlin and Henry Gray for the first time since 1955.

The 2009 lineup features Wanda Jackson, Dan Penn and Bobby Emmons, Howard Tate, Otis Clay, ? and the Mysterians, Carl Mann and the James Blood Ulmer Trio.

Reuters/Billboard

Friday, January 30, 2009

Classical Fans Build Vacations Around Music

LONDON (Billboard) – Dedicated rock fans have long made vacations out of following their favorite bands on the road. Now European classical fans are booking entire holidays around their chosen genre.

Travel industry executives say that growing numbers of classical fans are exchanging beaches for Berlioz and Bizet, with classical music festival organizers and venues benefiting from increased bookings.

John Whibley, who organizes classical music tours through his U.K.-based John Whibley "Holidays With Music" agency, says such trips are becoming increasingly popular among members of his target demographic -- "comfortably off" tourists over the age of 50.

"People like spending time with those who share a common interest," Whibley says. "Friendships are made on holiday, and clients return to see their friends."

In the last 10 years, more than half of Whibley's 1,200-strong client base has taken more than one tour with his firm, with 140 people booking seven or more trips, he says. Whibley runs about 25 high-end tours per year to classical music festivals or events. They range from 775 pounds ($1,130) for a four-night trip to the United Kingdom's Buxton Festival (including four operas, meals and sightseeing) to 1,875 pounds ($2,737) for a six-night trip to the Haydn Festival in Eisenstadt, Germany, which includes four-star hotel accommodations and nightly concerts by the Amsterdam Baroque Orchestra.

MUTUAL BENEFITS

Concert venues welcome the guaranteed ticket sales that such tours bring.

"We work together with more than 300 travel agencies and have a very close marketing relationship with (tourist organization) Berlin Tourismus Marketing," says Berlin State Opera head of marketing Sabine Turner. "A third of our audience comes from outside of the city, and this is seeing an upward trend."

Most classical music tour operators don't have formal business relationships with venues or festival promoters, preferring to book tickets on an ad hoc basis.

"Not many (travel operators) want to meet our 15 percent deposit conditions on tickets. Most prefer to reserve them and pay nearer the time," says Kim Gaynor, managing director of Switzerland's Verbier Festival, one of Whibley's touring destinations.

Gaynor suggests that the Verbier fest itself could soon compete for some of the same tour business.

"Running bespoke packages is something the festival would like to do in the future," she says. "It's a great way of increasing attendance."

But despite their relatively high prices, classical music tours are often less profitable than mainstream tours, according to Nigel Hosking, senior product manager at the U.K. tour operator Cox & Kings.

"You have to pay (for) an expert, musicians and excursions," he says. "We accept that we don't make much profit on them."

Still, Australian classical musician Vivienne Pittendrigh, who founded Chamber Music Holidays and Festivals in 1982, says classical music tour operators like herself are proving to be a growing niche. Her agency, which has offices on the Greek island of Corfu and in Bournemouth, England, averages about 78 bookings per year, up from an initial annual average of 20 customers.

Tour operators also cut deals directly with individual artists and chamber groups. Pittendrigh books musicians for her own events, such as the Divertimenti in Corfu, while Whibley hires musicians for some of his tours.

Organist/singer Peter Medhurst works with Cox & Kings as a specialist tour guide and musical performer. He leads tours to Vienna and Salzburg, Austria, performing organ and vocal recitals for tour groups.

"It creates goodwill all 'round," Medhurst says. "If you're taking a party of 35 to a venue, that's a chunk of seats filled immediately, and these audiences are also likely to get to know the artist and follow them."

Reuters/Billboard

Spears Gets Order Against Lutfi, Ghalib

LOS ANGELES – Britney Spears has obtained a restraining order against former pal Osama "Sam" Lutfi and one-time boyfriend Adnan Ghalib, court records show.

Attorneys for Spears and her father, who is her legal conservator, received the order Friday. The documents state that Lutfi, Ghalib and attorney Jon Eardley have been trying to gain control of Spears' affairs.

"On the first anniversary of the establishment of the conservatorship, the co-conservators are informed and believe that these three figures are working in concert to disrupt the conservatorship, with an utter disregard for Ms. Spears' health and well being," the documents state.

Lutfi was a manager and friend of Spears, whose mother once accused him of grinding pills into her food to control her. Ghalib, a paparazzo, had dated the singer.


Judge Aviva K. Bobb signed a temporary restraining order Friday forbidding Lutfi, Ghalib and Eardley from having contact with Spears, her parents and her young children. A hearing on whether to extend the order is scheduled for next month.

The documents, released late Friday, claim that Lutfi tried to contact Spears in late December by sending text messages to her hairdresser. The documents state Lutfi later started sending text messages to Spears and one of her father's attorneys, Blair Berk, trying to arrange a meeting.

Spears father, Jamie, wrote in a sworn declaration that he has found Lutfi's phone number in his daughter's phone records.

The documents state that Spears continues to inform Ghalib of her travel "and that he then arranges for paparazzi to meet and film her to his financial benefit," the documents state.

A phone message left for Lutfi was not returned Friday. A phone number for Ghalib could not immediately be found.

Geraldine Wyle, an attorney for Jamie Spears, wrote that Lutfi and Ghalib have "disappeared," and private investigators had been trying to find the pair unsuccessfully for six weeks.

The order, first reported Friday by the celebrity Web site TMZ, alleges that Lutfi has also sent "anonymous, harassing and threatening" messages to Spears' father.

This week, the documents state, an attorney sent a proposal to remove Spears' court appointed attorney. He later told Spears' attorneys that he had been contacted by Eardley and Lutfi, according to the filings. The documents were never filed with the court, and that attorney dropped Lutfi and Eardley as clients, the documents state.

Eardley once claimed to be Spears' attorney and tried to get her conservatorship case moved to federal court. A phone message left at Eardley's office was not returned Friday.

Spears and her father agreed not to renew a temporary restraining order that was issued against Lutfi last year when it expired in July.

At the time, Spears' court-appointed attorney Samuel D. Ingham III issued a statement renouncing their friendship. "Britney has made clear to everyone that she does not want to be further harassed or contacted in any way by Osama 'Sam' Lutfi, now or at anytime in the future," Ingham said in a statement.

Lutfi at the time declined to comment, saying only that he and Jamie Spears had reached an agreement.

That arrangement called for Lutfi to have no contact with Britney Spears or her parents, according to details released Friday.

Spears was placed under the conservatorship a year ago on Sunday. The arrangement has been expensive — her estate has paid out hundreds of thousands of dollars in legal fees — but since her father took control of her life, the pop singer has not had the bouts of erratic behavior, including two hospitalizations, that led to his intervention.

She released her newest album, "Circus" in December on her 27th birthday and is preparing for an upcoming concert tour.

Madonna Resuming Sticky & Sweet Tour

NASHVILLE (Billboard) – Madonna will crank up her Sticky & Sweet tour again this summer with about 25 more shows in the U.K. and Europe. The initial trek wrapped December 21 in Sao Paulo, Brazil.

The final leg of the tour -- already the top-grossing tour ever by a female or solo artist -- will start in London at the O2 Arena on July 4. Madonna also will play the Manchester (U.K.) Evening News Arena. The rest of the shows on the tour will be at stadiums in European markets that Madonna has never played or hasn't played in several years, according to tour producer Arthur Fogel, chairman of global music for Live Nation. The complete route and list of venues will be released Friday (January 30).

Adding another leg to a tour is a highly unusual move for Madonna. "It absolutely has not happened in the four tours I've been involved with," Fogel told Billboard.com. "There has been talk (of extending) during each one, but it has never come to be. But with this one, she loves the show, she's had a great time and she's excited about playing new markets."


The extension will take Sticky & Sweet to around 80 shows, and boost it well into the top five grossing tours of all time. Despite the more than six-month break, the tour will feature the same production and performers as in 2008.

The Sticky & Sweet tour was the first under a 10-year multi-rights agreement between Madonna and Live Nation, valued in some reports at about $120 million.

Reuters/Billboard

Springsteen Promises High-Energy Halftime Show

TAMPA, Fla. – Anybody who thinks it's tough playing the halftime show at the Super Bowl with 150 million people watching should try serenading Barack Obama with the majestic granite visage of Abraham Lincoln staring over your shoulder.

Bruce Springsteen did.

"It kind of was a good warm-up for this," Springsteen joked Thursday after arriving in Tampa with the E Street Band. "That takes some of the pressure off, you know."

In his first news conference in more than 20 years, The Boss was as cool as ever.


Wearing black jeans, a black crewneck sweater and black boots, Springsteen and his band charmed a standing-room-only crowd by joking about his lack of football knowledge, that the group is still together — and its members still alive — and the tremendous year he's having personally and professionally.

"Is there anybody from New Jersey? Don't give them the microphone!" the Garden State native called out before taking questions in his first large forum since a 1987 news conference for Amnesty International.

But Springsteen has reason to celebrate.

His song, "The Wrestler," from the movie of the same name, won a Golden Globe earlier this month, and he followed it with a performance at the National Mall to honor Obama two days before the inauguration. Springsteen was a huge Obama booster during the campaign.

His latest CD, "Working on a Dream," was released Tuesday, and he'll kick off a world tour in San Jose, Calif., on April 1.

"Good times," the 59-year-old rocker smiled. "You just have years where things happen, or years where it's quieter. But what's special for me right now is I really believe our band is going through sort of a golden age. We've made three of what I think are some of our best records in a row, which is really one of the reasons we're here. And the band, on the last tour, played the best it's ever played.

"We've been on the road awhile. We're some old soldiers. But the band is still really burning, and I really want people to know about the record. Good year, you know? It's been great."

So now the band plays Sunday's halftime show of the Super Bowl, which is enjoying a run of booking major talent for the roughly 15-minute slot before the largest television event in the nation. Acts have recently included the Rolling Stones, U2, Paul McCartney, Prince and Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers.

The NFL said last year's halftime show with Petty was watched by more than 148 million viewers in the U.S.

Springsteen, for years, had turned down invitations to play the Super Bowl, unsure of the legitimacy of such a performance. After all, for many years the halftime show was made up of local and college marching bands and drill teams.

But Springsteen said the opportunity to promote the album, and the upgraded production team that has given the invitation a prestige factor, changed his mind.

"Initially, it was sort of a novelty and so it didn't quite feel right," he explained. "But it was just like, this is the year. ... Bands of our generation, you can sort of be seen on a stage like this or, like, not seen. There's not a lot of middle places. It is a tremendous venue."

The performance is expected to be a teaser for the upcoming tour, and scores of Las Vegas sports books are taking bets on the set list. Asked who ultimately decides what songs will be played, Springsteen staked his claim as leader of the band.

"I'm the Boss! The Boss decides what we play!" he yelled. "Nobody else decides. People suggest. Hint. Beg. Cajole. But I decide."

Pittsburgh receiver Hines Ward said he was looking forward to the performance, and even had a song request.

"I love Bruce. I hope he plays 'Born in the USA.' He has a great voice when he says, 'Boorrrn,' " Ward said. "He has a lot of swagger about himself. He's very confident. When he's up there performing, it's all about him."

Springsteen only offered one slight teaser, vowing to pack the bands' usual emotion and energy into their brief performance.

"We want it to be a 12-minute party," he said. "The idea of the show is, you are going to the Meadowlands, you get lost on the way. You are watching your clock, `Damn, the show is starting right now.' You stop at a bar to get some directions, and the bar gets held up while you are there. So that takes another 45 minutes to get out of there.

"You come back and you miss your exit on the turnpike, and you are driving to get back around. And so you make it into the stadium 2 hours and 48 minutes into the show — that's what you are going to see: the last 12 minutes."

Jennifer Hudson Films New Video

NEW YORK – Jennifer Hudson has finished filming her first video since the slayings of her mother, brother and nephew.

The clip for "If This Isn't Love" was done in Los Angeles and is set to debut the week of Feb. 9.

The 27-year-old singer/actress is slowly starting to return back to work following the October slayings of her 57-year-old mother, Darnell Hudson Donerson; 29-year-old brother Jason Hudson; and 7-year-old nephew Julian King. Her estranged brother-in-law has been charged in the killings.

She is scheduled to sing the national anthem at the Super Bowl on Sunday, and also at the Feb. 8 Grammy Awards, where she is nominated for four awards for her self-titled debut CD.

Thursday, January 29, 2009

OONY Cancels Remaining Performances This Season

NEW YORK – The Opera Orchestra of New York has canceled its two remaining performances this season because of the recession.

The company, which usually presents three or four concert performances each season at Carnegie Hall, scrapped plans to perform Wagner's "Rienzi" on March 19 and Cherubini's "Medea" on April 21. It also canceled a concert with Ferruccio Furlanetto on Feb. 27.

It's only performance this season was Rimsky-Korsakov's "The Czar's Bride" on Oct. 15.

"Rienzi" was rescheduled for next season, which also is to include Meyerbeer's "L'Africaine" and a benefit recital by soprano Aprile Millo. "Medea" is now planned to open the 2010-11 season.

The cancellation was first reported on the Web site parterre.com.

Lynyrd Skynyrd Keyboardist Dies At Florida Home

ORANGE PARK, Fla. – Lynyrd Skynyrd keyboard player Billy Powell, who played on such hits as "Sweet Home Alabama" and survived the 1977 plane crash that killed three band members, died Wednesday. He was 56.

Powell called 911 in this Jacksonville suburb saying he was having trouble breathing. Rescue crews performed CPR, but he was pronounced dead about an hour later, Orange Park Police Lt. Mark Cornett said.

Powell, who had a history of heart problems, missed a Tuesday appointment with his doctor for a cardiac evaluation, and a heart attack is suspected as the cause of death.

The Jacksonville-based band was formed in 1966 by a group of high school students — famously, it took its name from a physical education teacher they disliked, Leonard Skinner. Powell joined the group in 1970 and became its keyboardist in 1972, the year before they released their first album, "Pronounced leh-nerd skin-nerd."

It became one of the South's most popular rock groups, and gained national fame with such hits as "Free Bird," "What's Your Name" and especially "Sweet Home Alabama," which reached the top 10 on the charts in 1974. The band was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 2006.

The band was decimated on Oct. 20, 1977, when their chartered plane crashed in a swamp near McComb, Miss.

Six people were killed — lead singer Ronnie Van Zant; guitarist Steve Gaines; Gaines' sister, vocalist Cassie Gaines; as well as an assistant road manager, the pilot and co-pilot.

Powell received facial injuries in the crash, but eventually recovered. He was the only band member well enough to attend the funerals of those killed in the crash.

Two years after the accident, Powell and fellow members Allen Collins, Gary Rossington and Leon Wilkeson formed the Rossington-Collins Band. It broke up in 1982.

In 1987 Johnny Van Zant — Ronnie's brother — and a new Lynyrd Skynyrd Band went on a tribute tour, and Powell was on hand again in 1991 when the revived version of the band put out a new album, "Lynyrd Skynyrd 1991" and started a tour in Baton Rouge, La., where the band was headed in 1977 when the plane crashed.

Fans who kept their tickets from the canceled 1977 concert were admitted free.

The band's last album, "Vicious Cycle," was released in 2003.

Johnny Van Zant was devastated by Powell's death. Hearkening back to the deaths of other members of the band, he said: "Maybe it is just the destiny of Lynyrd Skynyrd. We've played before millions and millions of people and it's been a wonderful ride and a bumpy one too."

Van Zant said Powell had been a roadie for the band when his brother heard him playing the keyboard.

"Nobody knew he could play the keyboard," Van Zant said.

Earlier this year, Powell and the band took a four-day cruise on a ship out of Miami with "4,000 crazy Skynyrd fans," said Van Zant.

The band had recorded several songs for a new album and had upcoming gigs, which will be canceled, Van Zant said.

Howard Kramer, curatorial director at the Rock and Roll Hall, said Powell "was a phenomenal piano player. The band may be able to get another piano player, but they will never replace Billy Powell."

"He was one of the best piano keyboardists, rock 'n' roll keyboardists, of our lifetime," said Ross Schilling, the band's manager.

Hank Williams Jr. said: "I will truly miss Billy. We have all lost one of our best rowdy friends."

Zappa Family Loses Court Battle In Germany

DUSSELDORF, Germany (Billboard) – Gail Zappa, widow of U.S. rock legend Frank Zappa, has failed in her bid to stop a German music festival from using her husband's name and image.

Zappa and her family trust had launched a lawsuit against the German Frank Zappa fan club over its annual Zappanale festival, demanding the removal of a bronze sculpture of Zappa at the festival site in Bad Doberan and damages of $325,000 if the festival continues to use the Zappanale name.


But the higher court in Dusseldorf ruled January 21 that festival organizers may continue to use Zappa's name and his image on the festival logo and related merchandise such as T-shirts and baseball caps. It ruled that Gail Zappa's rights were not violated and that she could not prove she uses the Zappa brand in Germany herself. The court found that she has had knowledge of the festival since it began in 1990. Frank Zappa died in 1993.

Several thousand Zappa fans had demanded the withdrawal of the lawsuit, which was launched in April 2008.

Thomas Dippel, festival speaker and head of the German Zappa fan club, welcomed the ruling.

"We have always been certain that we have the older rights," he said. "We have also patented the name of the festival with the German patent office. Gail Zappa only applied for the patent of her own rights in 2002."

The Zappanale festival, which features various bands performing composer/guitarist Zappa's music, had 6,800 visitors in 2008. The 2009 edition is scheduled for August 12-16.

Reuters/Billboard