Archive: June 2010 (71-80 of 135)

Jun 14 2010 05:39 PM ET

'Jersey Shore' rap: Preview the debut single from 'The Situation,' if you must

the-situationImage Credit: Jason Merritt/Getty ImagesJersey Shore alpha-sleaze Mike “The Situation” Sorrentino is about to drop his debut rap single this week. I know this because MTV News reported on it, and also, to my infinite regret, because TMZ has a 50-second preview clip available for streaming. Like the man himself, the song is called “The Situation,” but it’s not a true solo outing, as it features no less than three credited guests. Note: When shouty hype man Fatman Scoop is the least annoying part of your song, you’re in trouble.

Check out the preview clip after the jump (reluctant thanks to Vulture), if so inclined. You’ll hear a lot of air horns, some tinny synth presets, and the wackest lyrics this side of Kevin Federline. Sorry, that’s unfair to K-Fed. “Whoa, whoa, Situation,” the bro with the abs repeats a few times. Later, he announces plans to “grab some ass, drink some ‘gnac/I ain’t doing s— ’til I get my cash.” Let’s all do our best to make sure Situation does not get his cash, shall we?

I’ll say this for The Situation’s “The Situation”: It makes Enrique Iglesias’ Jersey Shore single sound like Pachelbel’s Canon. Or do you actually like this thing? Sound off in the comments below.

READ FULL STORY »

Jun 14 2010 04:54 PM ET

More new Arcade Fire tunes surface: Excited yet?

arcade-fireArcade Fire‘s The Suburbs is a mere seven weeks from arrival. Can you believe it? You ought to, now that two more songs from the album that was once just a shadowy rumor have appeared online.

Reports have pegged “Ready to Start” as Arcade Fire’s next single, though band reps’ lips remain sealed. It certainly sounds like a strong contender. Some arresting imagery in this one: “Businessmen drink my blood,” Win Butler sighs in Robert Smithly tones. (True Blood music supervisors, are you listening?) Behind him, the band broods and builds, then fades in a sudden way that keeps making me want to hit “play” again ASAP.

“We Used to Wait,” which BBC DJ Zane Lowe premiered across the pond, opens on a brighter note, with plinking pianos and crisp drums that wouldn’t be out of place on, oh, a Hall and Oates song. A nervous edge that’s more typically Arcade Fire creeps in as Butler begins to sing. “I hope that something pure can last,” he repeats, sounding unsure of himself.

Both songs feel thematically and musically linked to the double-A-side single that Arcade Fire surprised us with last month. Taken together, the four tunes we’ve now heard have me more psyched than ever for The Suburbs‘s Aug. 3 arrival. How about you?

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

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Katy Perry on Lady Gaga ‘feud’: “People love cat fights”
Bonnaroo ’10: Sunday

Lady Gaga flips off photographers
Anita Baker drops the ball singing the national anthem at NBA finals

Jun 14 2010 03:36 PM ET

Rock legend Steve Miller on his first new album in 17 years -- and why record companies are full of 'clowns.'

Categories:

Steve-MillerImage Credit: Ralph Notaro/Getty ImagesTomorrow Steve Miller will release Bingo!, his first studio album in 17 years. Why has the once prolific rocker been silent for so long? Let’s just say he wasn’t exactly overjoyed with the way his record label handled the release of his 1993 collection, See Hear. “I said, ‘I’ve f—ing had it with these clowns,’” recalls the man who brought us “The Joker” and “Take the Money and Run.” “‘Go ahead and drive it right into the ground, man! You guys are finished anyway. I’m not going to give you any of my time.’”

Speak your mind, Steve! “Oh, I always do,” he chuckles. “Don’t worry, there won’t be any pussyfooting around!”

Miller’s return to recording was prompted by a remark made to him by his longtime friend, the engineer and producer Andy Johns. “I was working on a DVD and Andy was going to mix it,” says Miller. “He said, ‘You know, before I die, I want to do a blues album with you, Steve.’ So I took the band over to the studio at the Skywalker Ranch. We have 28 songs in the can and we’re splitting it into two CDs.”

On Bingo!, Miller covers a raft of blues-flavored hits, including BB King’s “Rock Me Baby” and Earl King’s “Come On.” He also tackles a clutch of tracks from Jimmie Vaughan’s 1994 album, Strange Pleasure. “I just love Jimmie,” says Miller. “He’s my favorite blues guitar player of everybody playing today. He’s my man. I prefer him to his brother [the late Stevie Ray Vaughan]. I can show you pictures of me and Jimmie Vaughan playing onstage with bands full of really great musicians. And he’s hitting one note, and everybody on the whole f—ing stage is looking straight at him like, ‘What did he say?’ He’s heavy, man.”

Vaughan is far from the only bluesman whose prowess Miller has witnessed up close. In the early ’60s, he moved from his native Texas to Chicago where he became a mainstay of the blues clubs. For a spell he even played in the band of  legendary blues guitarist Buddy Guy who, according to Miller, insisted his musicians imbibe something a tad stronger than soda before hitting the stage. “The rule was you had to have a shot of bourbon before each set,” says Miller. “I’m like 21, and I sounds good to me: ‘Okay!’ We worked from nine until four in the morning, and we worked six nights a week. After about three weeks I just said, ‘Buddy, I can’t do this any more. You’re going to kill me!’”

Bingo! is being released through Miller’s own Space Cowboy label in partnership with Roadrunner/Loud & Proud Records. The guitarist says he did investigate the possibility of putting the CD out on a major but that the experience merely served as a reminder of why he divorced himself from the record industry in the first place. “We were in New York talking to some people at a major record company,” he recalls.  “And these young guys said, ‘Man, this is great! Did Steve write all these?’ I felt like saying, ‘Yes I did. And I’d like to play you my new ballad… ‘Unchained Melody!’”

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

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Katy Perry on Lady Gaga ‘feud’: “People love cat fights”
Bonnaroo ’10: Sunday

Lady Gaga flips off photographers
Anita Baker drops the ball singing the national anthem at NBA finals
EW exclusive: Leaked Eddie Vedder song “Better Days” is for Eat, Pray, Love soundtrack
Bonnaroo ’10 Thursday: The xx are a glum, glum band

Jun 14 2010 01:21 PM ET

Katy Perry denies that she is feuding with Lady Gaga: "People love cat fights. It's a turn on."

perry-gagaImage Credit: Bob Charlotte/PR Photos; RD/Kirkland/Retna ltdKaty Perry has told EW that she is not feuding with Lady Gaga. “I’m a massive fan,” the singer claimed over the weekend.

Rumors of a Perry-Gaga feud began last Tuesday when Perry tweeted that “Using blasphemy as entertainment is as cheap as a comedian telling a fart joke.” The comment was widely assumed to be an attack on Gaga’s “Alejandro” video which uses religious iconography. In fact, according to Perry, the tweet was “more of a non-specific, general thing. But everybody made it out to be a cat fight. I think people love cat fights. It’s a turn on for people.”

Perry, who was raised as a Christian, also said that she has a problem with what she regards as blasphemous behavior regardless of whether the perpetrator happens to be Gaga, or her own boyfriend, Russell Brand. “The other day he was yelling out the window,” recalled the singer, who is currently riding high with her “California Gurls” track.  “He said something a bit off color, kind of blasphemous about the Lord Jesus Christ, and I smacked him for it. It’s just kind of deeply rooted inside of me, and hard to get away from. But everybody knows I am a massive Lady Gaga fan. If you look through my tweets, there will be about ten of them that say that I am obsessed with her.”

Are you happy that Ms. Perry has cleared that up? Disappointed that she and Lady G are not cat fighting? And what do you think of the “Alejandro” video?

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

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Bonnaroo ’10: Sunday
Lady Gaga flips off photographers
Anita Baker drops the ball singing the national anthem at NBA finals
EW exclusive: Leaked Eddie Vedder song “Better Days” is for Eat, Pray, Love soundtrack
Bonnaroo ’10 Thursday: The xx are a glum, glum band

Jun 14 2010 12:22 PM ET

Bonnaroo '10 Sunday: What the sun heats up, the Dave Matthews Band cools down

Categories: Bonnaroo, On the Scene

dave-matthewsImage Credit: Whitney Pastorek for EW.comIt was hot at Bonnaroo yesterday. (How hot was it?) It was so hot, I could have poached an organic free-range egg in my Nalgene bottle. It was so hot, the mice crawled out of Jamey Johnson’s beard, hoping to catch a breeze. It was so hot, They Might Be Giants only got halfway through “Particle Man” before he evaporated. I’ve got a million of ‘em, folks. Try the veal.

It was so very hot, in fact, that your brave festival correspondent, namely me, decided to forgo the photo pits — always a good 30 degrees or so worse than the temperature outside — and just see as much music as I could. At a music festival! It was a crazy decision, and one that paid off. Between 2 and 8 p.m., I saw a grand total of 14 bands, and time-coded my notes as I went to give you a minute-by-minute recap of my travels leading up to the Dave Matthews Band and their big closing set on the mainstage. Oh, how I was looking forward to “Ants Marching”! All day, as I walked under the oppressive sun, that was my thought: Just a few more hours, and you get to hear “Ants Marching”! Keep going! You can do it! Almost there!

After the jump: Jamey Johnson, Regina Spektor, Against Me(!), Fogerty, Ween, They Might Be Giants, Miranda Lambert, Phoenix, and yet another lesson in why the secret to life is low expectations…

READ FULL STORY »

Jun 13 2010 02:24 PM ET

Bonnaroo '10 Saturday: Stevie Wonder and Jay-Z bring in the noise and also the funk

Categories: Bonnaroo, On the Scene

jay-zImage Credit: Whitney Pastorek for EW.comBonnaroo is frequently a land where time has no meaning, where an hour can pass in a blink or an eternity depending on what you’re listening to and the quality of your footwear. While Friday’s 14-hour marathon was an experience I’d not trade — until you’ve watched an entire Kings of Leon set while standing in mud so thick you have to move your rain boots every couple of songs to be sure they don’t get stuck, I believe you have not yet lived — it’s possible that my compact, musically-mindblowing Saturday is the day of this year’s ‘Roo I’ll remember most.

Though I only saw six artists, there were moments in each set that lifted me out of my post-apocalyptic surroundings, transporting me on a cloud of endorphins to a happy place where puppies and kittens roamed, and beer was non-caloric and free. The blisters on my feet stopped screaming. The pain in my back subsided. The worker bee who lives in my head and is constantly telling me to keep moving keep working you’re not doing enough they’re gonna yell at you was silenced, and I was able to enjoy every one of the six acts as a straight-up fan of music who felt very lucky to be standing in her rain boots in that Tennessee field in that humid moment.

After the jump: The soaring emotion of Mumford & Sons; the thunder of the Dead Weather; the songwriting royalty of John Prine; the spazzy joy of Weezer; the uplifting mastery of Stevie Wonder. And then there was the massive mainstream hip-hop headliner who not only started on time — we here at Bonnaroo are skittish about such things, *cough*Kanye*cough* — but proceeded to absolutely rap our faces off. I understand self-aggrandizement is par for the course in his genre, but as far as I’m concerned, Jay-Z is welcome to refer to himself as “the best rapper alive” as often as he’d like from now on. Jigga what? Jigga yes. HIT ME!

READ FULL STORY »

Jun 12 2010 05:07 PM ET

Bonnaroo ’10 Friday: Kings of Leon come home

kings-of-leon-1Image Credit: Whitney Pastorek for EW.comIt was 6 a.m. when my head finally hit the pillow this morning, after an epic day in the Bonnaroo fields that started with a standup comedian in exile, peaked with the Tennessee homecoming of a suddenly-giant rock band, and ended with a New York City dance act in mourning. After fourteen straight hours of music, my ears were ringing, my blisters were burning, and my back had taken a brief sabbatical from operating in a fully upright and locked position. It was difficult to remember which foot to place forward first. I may or may not have briefly wept sometime around 3:45 a.m. It’s hard to remember that long ago.

But there’s no rest for the weary at America’s most endurance-based music festival. Bonnaroo demands, and almost always deserves, a herculean effort. To stand inside those walls, surrounded by light and sound and flesh, is to experience a peculiar pull to cover every inch of its currently-muddy soil and consume whatever it cares to offer. I promise I will not write this whole blog post like some sort of epic poem, but seriously, Mixers, yesterday was long.

After the jump, we begin with a little Conan O’Brien, then party with the Gossip, harmonize with Dr. Dog, meet cute with She & Him, raise a glass to the National, raise a sausage to Tenacious D, meditate with Tori Amos, sit at the feet of Steve Martin while he plays the banjo, check out new songs from Kings of Leon, almost get killed in the Flaming Lips photo pit, bliss out to the Black Keys, and finally, finally put the night to rest alongside LCD Soundsystem. Won’t you come along? READ FULL STORY »

Jun 11 2010 04:09 PM ET

Lady Gaga flips off photographers at Mets game: Do you care?

Categories: Lady Gaga, Let's Argue!

lady-gaga-the-fingerImage Credit: Nick Laham/Getty ImagesA photo of Lady Gaga that’s so far beyond the pale, it’s not fit for anyone with an impressionable imagination or certain heart conditions has been all over the Web lately. The shocking shot depicts Gaga attending a Mets game at NYC’s Citi Field yesterday while wearing a studded bikini and — my goodness! — extending an upraised middle finger toward a photographer’s camera. It’s so risque that it should really go below the jump on a family blog like this, but somehow we’ve slipped up and posted it right there next to these words. Aren’t you scandalized?

Okay, as you may have gathered, I’m being a bit sarcastic. Stars flip off paparazzi all the time. When you’re followed by cameras constantly and have achieved anything less than full Zen calm and self-mastery, it’s pretty much bound to happen now and again. Not really a huge deal. And Lady Gaga is not exactly famous for her polite and shy demeanor. But for some reason this particular image is making waves. The Mets formally apologized to Jerry Seinfeld, in whose private box Gaga was sitting when she gave cameras the bird. (I’m sure Jerry Seinfeld has never seen this foul gesture before in his life.) Gaga even issued a self-righteous tweet in her own defense today: “A middle finger is more New York than a corporate ambush. I bleed for my hometown, and I’d die for my fans.”

You’ve seen the photo. Am I the only one who thinks this whole thing is a total non-issue? Or has this incident gravely shaken your faith in Lady Gaga? Vote after the jump.
READ FULL STORY »

Jun 11 2010 02:04 PM ET

Anita Baker drops the ball singing national anthem at NBA finals

anita-bakerImage Credit: Elsa/Getty ImagesFolks at Boston’s TD Banknorth Garden last night (June 10) to watch the Boston Celtics play against the Los Angeles Lakers in Game 4 of the NBA finals must have been delighted to know that repeat Grammy award winner Anita Baker would be singing the “Star Spangled Banner” before the game. And why shouldn’t they have? She’s a R&B legend whose vocal skills have wowed many for decades. Then she sang. And boy, was it bad.

Mind you, Baker is regularly invited to sing the national anthem at sporting events. That wasn’t her first time around a court or stadium. I doubt Baker will be getting many invites after last night, though. Check out her woeful performance here. The off-key showing soon propelled her to Trending Topic status on Twitter, as thousands of disappointed viewers sounded off on how much they didn’t enjoy it.

Funny thing is, Baker appeared not to even notice how bad she was. What do you think? Was her performance that bad? Or are people just overreacting? Let us know.

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

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Bonnaroo ’10 Thursday: The xx are a glum, glum band
Conan O’Brien jams with Jack White in Nashville
Black Eyed Peas, Shakira, Alicia Keys kick off the World Cup
Drake says his fling with Rihanna left him feeling “terrible”
Katy Perry leads Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, Black Eyed Peas return to top 10
The Strokes return for first gig since 2006

Jun 11 2010 01:56 PM ET

EW exclusive news: Leaked Eddie Vedder song 'Better Days' is his contribution to the 'Eat Pray Love' soundtrack

roberts-vedderImage Credit: Ebet Roberts/Redferns/Getty ImagesOver the past couple of days, the always-exciteable members of the Pearl Jam message board community have been scrambling to figure out the origin of an accidentally leaked Eddie Vedder-sung track apparently called “Better Days.” The song was hacked from the secure site of Monkeywrench Records, Pearl Jam’s label, and spread — as such things do — like wildfire across the web, with speculation ranging from “It’s a lost track from Riot Act!” to “It’s this year’s Christmas single!” (You can hear the leak here.)

How about: It’s Eddie Vedder’s contribution to the Eat Pray Love soundtrack! A source close to the band has confirmed exclusively to EW.com that the track is a new original from Vedder, intended to play during this summer’s Julia Roberts-starring odyssey. Lyrics like “My love is saved for the universe, see me now I’m bursting / on one planet, so many turns, different worlds” would certainly seem to jive with Elizabeth Gilbert’s story of global self-discovery, and there’s an exotic edge to the instrumentation that could happily live in Italy, or India, or Indonesia. Eat Pray Love star Javier Bardem and Vedder are friends, which may explain Ed’s participation. And considering 7 million people or something bought Gilbert’s book, it’s a savvy involvement for anyone.

Now that we know what the song’s for, what do you think, Mixers? (And you, Jamily friends?) A worthy contribution to the soundtrack? A worthy soundtrack for Vedder to contribute to? And if you’ve just now heard the leak, what do you think?

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

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Bonnaroo ’10 Thursday: The xx are a glum, glum band
Conan O’Brien jams with Jack White in Nashville
Black Eyed Peas, Shakira, Alicia Keys kick off the World Cup
Drake says his fling with Rihanna left him feeling “terrible”
Katy Perry leads Billboard Hot 100 singles chart, Black Eyed Peas return to top 10
The Strokes return for first gig since 2006

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