Archive: February 2010 (51-60 of 115)

Feb 16 2010 11:57 AM ET

Black Eyed Peas battle robots in 'Imma Be Rocking That Body' video: Watch their sci-fi adventure here

Hey, does anybody know whether the Black Eyed Peas are robots? Anyone? Fergie? Oh, there she is, shouting, “WE’RE NOT ROBOTS!” in the dramatic clip that introduces the Peas’ new video. Glad to have that cleared up.

While themselves 100 percent human, however, the Black Eyed Peas are friends with robots, as anyone who watched the Grammys this year knows. Hence the conflict that drives the epic 10-minute-plus video for this new “Imma Be”/”Rock That Body” megamix. Click play below to see Fergie strutting down a desert road surrounded by freaky reptiles, followed by an insane battle between the Peas, their robot friends, and some less friendly robot bad guys. Since the Peas are not violent types, their main weapon in this video is some sort of b-boy ray gun that makes its victims involuntarily pop and lock. I won’t spoil all the action-packed plot twists for you, but suffice it to say that I am now convinced will.i.am should direct the next Transformers movie.

Speaking of Will, he thinks this is “the best video black eyed peas ever made.” He might be right! Also, toward the end of the song, he raps, “Why don’t you put it on a blog?” Done and done. Check out the high-quality “Imma Be Rocking That Body” video below via DipDive, or try a low-res rip on YouTube if you don’t have the bandwidth to spare. Then let us know what you think of the video in the comments, below. Also feel free to speak up if you have an opinion on the whole “are they robots?” question.

(Follow the Music Mix on Twitter: @EWMusicMix.)

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Jay-Z slams “We Are the World” remake: “Some things are just untouchable”
“We Are the World” remake debuts during Olympics opening ceremony: What did you think?
‘My Sharona’: the real Sharona remembers late Knack singer Doug Fieger
Tonight’s “We Are the World” update: Watch footage from inside the recording
John Mayer is very sorry about his explicit sexual and racial comments; do you believe him?

Feb 16 2010 11:35 AM ET

'How to Make It in America,' step one: Get a fantastic theme song from Aloe Blacc

When my friends and I watched the series premiere of HBO’s How to Make It in America this weekend, we rewound as soon as the opening credits were over so we could listen again to the new show’s awesome theme song, “I Need a Dollar.” It sounded like the type of thing you might discover deep in someone’s collection of old soul records on vinyl — maybe an obscure Bill Withers B-side we weren’t familiar with?

Nope! A quick Google check revealed that we were enjoying a brand new tune from 2010, not 1970. “I Need a Dollar” is the first single from singer Aloe Blacc‘s album Good Things, coming soon on left-field rap haven Stones Throw Records. His backing band on this track is retro-soul outfit El Michels Affair, whose work I’ve praised in this space.

Stones Throw is generously offering up “I Need a Dollar” as a free MP3 download, so go and grab it now, or watch a promo featuring How to Make It in America‘s title sequence below. (Frankly, those opening credits are the only part of the show that I’d say is worth your time — but hey, maybe it’ll improve in the next few episodes.) Then let us know if you’re digging How to Make It in America‘s theme song as much as I do.

(Follow the Music Mix on Twitter: @EWMusicMix.)

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Jay-Z slams “We Are the World” remake: “Some things are just untouchable”
“We Are the World” remake debuts during Olympics opening ceremony: What did you think?
‘My Sharona’: the real Sharona remembers late Knack singer Doug Fieger
Tonight’s “We Are the World” update: Watch footage from inside the recording
John Mayer is very sorry about his explicit sexual and racial comments; do you believe him?

Feb 16 2010 10:58 AM ET

Vatican newspaper releases list of top ten albums: Fleetwood Mac! Pink Floyd! ... Oasis?

L’ Osservatore Romano, the official newspaper of the Vatican in Italy, has released its official list of all-time top ten albums, and there is nary a children’s choir nor a Pat Boone best-of to be found.

Amongst the papal state’s surprisingly secular picks? The Beatles’ Revolver (holding the no. 1 spot), Pink Floyd’s The Dark Side of The Moon, Oasis’ (What’s the Story) Morning Glory?, and Michael Jackson’s Thriller, whose “illuminating simplicity and musical thrust” they hail. Also: U2’s Achtung Baby, Fleetwood Mac’s Rumours,  Donald Fagen of Steely Dan fame’s The Nightfly, Carlos Santana’s Supernatural, Paul Simon’s Graceland and David Crosby’s If I Could Only Remember My Name.

Even Bob Dylan’s recent Christmas-themed efforts couldn’t get him shortlisted, however; article authors Giuseppe Fiorentino and Gaetano Vallini excluded him on the grounds that generations of less-talented Dylan acolytes have “harshly tested the ears and patience of listeners with their inferior imitations, thinking that their tortured meanderings might interest somebody.” Tough toke, Bobby Zimmerman.

Does 82-tear-old Pope Benedict XVI personally approve? He is nominated alongside Oasis for a Brit music award—he for Classical Brit, they for best album of the last 30 years. Alas, the ceremonies are held separately, so it is unlikely the twain shall physically meet.

What do you think, readers—are the Vatican paper’s picks divinely right, or holy crap? For Santana, we would vote his 1970 classic Abraxas over the Rob Thomas-noodling Supernatural any day; then again, we are but mere heathen mortals. And perhaps the Church does not approve of his Wiccan muse?

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Jay-Z knocks ‘We Are the World’ remake: ‘Some things are just untouchable’
Sasquatch 2010: MGMT, Vampire Weekend, and My Morning Jacket join Pavement
‘My Sharona’: the real Sharona remembers late Knack singer Doug Fieger
Tonight’s “We Are the World” update: Watch footage from inside the recording

John Mayer is very sorry about his explicit sexual and racial comments; do you believe him?
Janelle Monae walks a funky ‘Tightrope’ with Big Boi

Feb 16 2010 10:50 AM ET

Jay-Z slams 'We Are the World' remake: 'Some things are just untouchable'

One face you won’t spot in the all-star “We Are the World” remake that premiered on Friday night is Jay-Z’s. Turns out, there’s a reason he didn’t want to participate. “I know everybody is gonna take this wrong: ‘We Are the World,’ I love it, and I understand the point and think it’s great,” Jay told MTV News in Dallas this weekend. “But I think ‘We Are the World’ is like ‘Thriller’ to me. I don’t ever wanna see it touched.” He went on: “I know the plight and everything that’s going on in Haiti. I applaud the efforts…but ‘We are the World’ is untouchable like ‘Thriller’ is untouchable. Some things are just untouchable. It was a valiant effort, but for me, it’s gonna be untouchable.” Instead, Jay-Z suggested that it might have been a better idea to record an entirely new song for Haiti relief — like, for instance, “Stranded,” the tune he performed last month at the Hope for Haiti Now telethon with Rihanna, Bono, and the Edge.

Do you think Jay-Z has a point here? Was the original “We Are the World” so timeless that any attempt to remake it would inevitably pale by comparison? Did Jay use the word “untouchable” enough in that quotation? Sound off in the comments, below.

(Follow the Music Mix on Twitter: @EWMusicMix.)

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
“We Are the World” remake debuts during Olympics opening ceremony: What did you think?
‘My Sharona’: the real Sharona remembers late Knack singer Doug Fieger
Tonight’s “We Are the World” update: Watch footage from inside the recording

John Mayer is very sorry about his explicit sexual and racial comments; do you believe him?
Janelle Monae walks a funky ‘Tightrope’ with Big Boi

Photo credit: Johnny Nunez/WireImage.com

Feb 16 2010 10:41 AM ET

Sasquatch 2010: MGMT, Vampire Weekend, and My Morning Jacket join Pavement

With festival season heading into full swing, Sasquatch—the indie music madness that takes place at the Gorge in George, Washington over Memorial Day weekend each year—announced the line-up for its festivities this year. According to Spinner.com, MGMT, Vampire Weekend (at left), and My Morning Jacket are the biggest acts to join the line-up, which includes the previously announced headliner,Pavement. The acts were announced at a show held at the Crocodile Cafe in Seattle last night.

Also signed on: Broken Social Scene, the National, the Hold Steady, Band of Horses, the xx, Dirty Projectors, Passion Pit, Miike Snow, Ween, Public Enemy, Tegan & Sara, LCD Soundsystem, and Massive Attack.

Who’s missing, Music Mixers? Will you be gearing up for Sasquatch 2010? If you could choose one late-add (or several!), who would it be?

(Follow the Music Mix on Twitter: @EWMusicMix.)

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
‘My Sharona’: the real Sharona remembers late Knack singer Doug Fieger
Tonight’s “We Are the World” update: Watch footage from inside the recording

John Mayer is very sorry about his explicit sexual and racial comments; do you believe him?
Janelle Monae walks a funky ‘Tightrope’ with Big Boi
Sugarland’s new Olympic single goes for the gold: Watch an exclusive preview here!
Linkin Park’s stark Haiti video: Watch ‘Not Alone’ here

Feb 15 2010 10:42 PM ET

'My Sharona': the real Sharona remembers late Knack singer Doug Fieger

Categories: In Memoriam

Among the friends and family who attended services for Knack lead singer Doug Fieger was Sharona Alperin, the real-life inspiration for “My Sharona.” Alperin, who dated Fieger for more than three years, toured around the world with the Knack and is now a real estate agent in Los Angeles who makes wise use of the domain name mysharona.com. “I spent the entire weekend with him, with his body [at the services],” she told EW today over the phone. “It was beautiful to see the people who paid him respect on his deathbed — the people who he was the biggest fan of.” Alperin, who had kept in touch with Fieger until recently, commented on the frontman’s undying zeal for his genre up to the present. “He was so devoted to rock and roll — a walking encyclopedia,” she said. “He would know the b-sides of every single in the day. Just a real fan.” Fieger, who died after battling cancer for several years, “was too young for sure,” said Alperin. “But I’m grateful that he’s out of pain.”

The sleeve of the 1979 hit single featured a real picture of Alperin. She said the photo shoot took about 10 minutes, because “that’s just what I would walk around in, a t-shirt and Levis…I guess it was considered raunchy since you can see my nipples through the shirt. Nowadays, that outfit would be considered tame.” Despite the ubiquity of “My Sharona” when it first charted and since its revitalization in 1994′s Reality Bites, Alperin says the effect of being the subject of such a popular song has been overwhelmingly positive. She admits that back when “My Sharona” was constantly on the radio, there were one or two times she might have turned it off, but when she hears it now, she listens. “How many people have a song written about them?” she asked. “I mean, who would I be to say ‘it’s too much’? I don’t tire of it.” Some of the most surreal moments, she said, are when she randomly hears no-lyrics versions of the song at the supermarket and dentist’s office. Alperin also gets at least one message a month from friends who just want her to know “My Sharona” is on. Family members recently called her from a Dodgers game: “They’re playing your song!”

“About 70 percent of the people I meet, as soon as I introduce myself as Sharona, they say “My Sharona,” said the Sharona. “And another 20 percent, you can tell, they’re thinking it in their heads. It’s so funny.”

(Follow the Music Mix on Twitter: @EWMusicMix.)

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Tonight’s “We Are the World” update: Watch footage from inside the recording
John Mayer is very sorry about his explicit sexual and racial comments; do you believe him?
Janelle Monae walks a funky ‘Tightrope’ with Big Boi
Sugarland’s new Olympic single goes for the gold: Watch an exclusive preview here!
Linkin Park’s stark Haiti video: Watch ‘Not Alone’ here

READ FULL STORY »

Feb 15 2010 10:30 AM ET

Olympic Songs of the Day from cross country skier James Southam

Categories: Olympics

As the 2010 Winter Olympics kicks off in Vancouver, EW.com wanted to find out what music is inspiring US athletes. So we asked a variety of Olympic competitors what song (or playlist of songs) they’ll be grooving to before they compete. We’ll run these throughout the Games. Good luck, Team USA!

James Southam, Cross Country Skiing (on NBC this afternoon)

“Boys on The Docks” by Dropkick Murphys
“Upbeat fight song with some great lines.”

“A Singer of Songs” by Johnny Cash
“Mellow song that just hits you and builds strength within.”

Photo Credit: Matthew Stockman/Getty Images

Feb 14 2010 05:33 PM ET

R.I.P. Doug Fieger, lead singer of the Knack

Categories: In Memoriam, Music

Doug Fieger, lead singer of rock group the Knack, died at 57 after a battle with cancer, his brother Geoffrey confirmed today. “I’ve had 10 great lives,” Fieger told the Detroit News in a January interview. “And I expect to have some more. I don’t feel cheated in any way, shape or form.” Get the Knack, the album that featured “My Sharona,” spent six weeks at No. 1 in 1979. (EW recently talked to the real Sharona, who inspired the song, about Fieger’s passing.) The hit single was perhaps best immortalized (or at least revitalized) via a hilarious impromptu gas station dance party in 1994′s Reality Bites. “Can you turn this up please? Please? You won’t be sorry.”

Purists may prefer Fieger and the Knack’s own performances of “My Sharona” and “Good Girls Don’t,” embedded after the jump. READ FULL STORY »

Feb 14 2010 02:00 PM ET

Another Olympic Song of the Day from skier Stacey Cook

Categories: Olympics

As the 2010 Winter Olympics kicks off in Vancouver, EW.com wanted to find out what music is inspiring US athletes. So we asked a variety of Olympic competitors what song (or playlist of songs) they’ll be grooving to before they compete. We’ll run these throughout the Games. Good luck, Team USA!

Stacey Cook, Alpine Skiing (on NBC tonight)

“Wild at Heart” by Gloriana

“The chorus sums it up best: ‘I dont want to do anything half way, don’t give a damn what anyone might say, I just want to free fall for awhile.’”

Photo Credit: Doug Pensinger/Getty Images

Feb 14 2010 10:00 AM ET

Olympic Playlist of the Day from biathlete Lowell Bailey

Categories: Olympics

As the 2010 Winter Olympics kicks off in Vancouver, EW.com wanted to find out what music is inspiring US athletes. So we asked a variety of Olympic competitors what song (or playlist of songs) they’ll be grooving to before they compete. We’ll run these throughout the Games. Good luck, Team USA!

Lowell Bailey, Biathlete (on NBC this afternoon)

Radiohead, “Karma Police”
Makes you wonder, if there were such a thing, how many times would you have been arrested?

Little Feat, “Fat Man In The Bathtub”
This is Lowell George and Co. at their finest.  Tight rhythm with George’s fat strat sustained slide rolling over the top!

Steely Dan, “Kid Charlemagne”
NO! this is NOT elevator music!  This is Becker and Fagan – two of the greatest musical talents ever.

Elliott Smith, “Needle In The Hay”
Smith’s greatest gift was transmitting emotion through a song.  Desperation is everywhere in this simple acoustic rendition. READ FULL STORY »

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