Archive: November 2010 (61-70 of 147)

Nov 17 2010 12:47 PM ET

Dr. Dre's first Detox single, 'Kush,' leaks online

Dr-DreImage Credit: Bryan Bedder/Getty ImagesIt’s hard to keep excitement going when the promised product is as oft-delayed as Dr. Dre‘s Detox album. But slowly, rap’s iconic producer and sometime rapper is breathing life back into the bodies of fans who’ve held their breath for too long. Yesterday Dre’s first single from his forthcoming album leaked online. It’s called “Kush,” and features longtime partner in rhyme Snoop Dogg—fittingly so, since it’s about marijuana. With a whipping bass line and Dre’s trademark menacing keys, it feels like this time Dre may actually be prepping to drop the album.

In an interview with radio host Big Boy, the California titan explained that he didn’t intend for it to come out and he doesn’t want people to think that it’s a true representation of the album. But he’s rolling with it nonetheless. “It’s about weed smoking and I don’t want people to think that’s what my album’s about,” he said. “This is actually the only song with that type of content in it. But it seems that  everybody likes it. So we’re going to go ahead and push with it.”

Dre’s also on the cover of XXL‘s Dec./Jan. issue talking about Detox. The album’s expected to hit stores early in 2011.

Have you heard “Kush” yet? Are you excited for Detox again? Let us know.

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

Nov 17 2010 11:30 AM ET

Metallica guitarist accidentally kicks a child off stage

MetallicaMetallica guitarist Kirk Hammett blasted a lot more than some great riffs last week during a show in Sydney, Australia. Rolling Stone reports that he also knocked a little girl off stage after accidentally kicking a balloon at her. A number of black balloons—which more resembled the oversized inflated workout balls found in gyms—decorated the stage and for fun fan interaction the band threw and kicked some out the the audience.

But in Hammett’s case, the ball didn’t get to float up and out into the crowd. The girl was at the edge of the stage (by the way, who let their toddler on a Metallica stage?) and felt the impact instantly as it left his foot and flew back until she flew off the stage. Oddly enough, the incident happened while they were playing “Seak And Destroy.” She’s reportedly fine and not injured.

You can check out the video after the jump.

READ FULL STORY »

Nov 17 2010 09:48 AM ET

Rihanna performs 'What's My Name' on the Late Show with David Letterman

Last night Bajan siren Rihanna performed her No. 1 Billboard smash “What’s My Name” on the  Late Show with David Letterman. In a hot Dolce & Gabbana polka dot getup and her new long red hair, she belted out the pop love song. Rihanna’s doing well using her island culture for mainstream success  and sounded pretty good. She’s not known for powerful vocals, but she’s no slouch either. Check out the performance and let us know what you think.

Rihanna’s LOUD is in stores now. Have you gotten it yet? Will you?

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

More Rihanna from EW.com:
Rihanna’s ‘What’s My Name?’ jumps to No. 1 on Billboard Hot 100 chart
Rihanna’s Loud reviewed

Nov 16 2010 08:38 PM ET

Pink is pregnant: 'I'm eating for two these days'

Filed under: Music, News, TV and tagged: ,

Ellen-Pink-stomachImage Credit: Warner Bros.Pink has announced that she is pregnant. On tomorrow’s episode of the Ellen DeGeneres Show, the pop superstar, 31, tells the host that she is “eating for two.” Pink reveals that she had been “working” on having a child with husband Carey Hart and that her doctor, “thinks it’s a girl.” The singer also says she had been nervous about announcing she was pregnant because she had previously suffered a miscarriage.

Finally, Pink describes her relationship with Hart as better than ever: “We worked really hard and we had our little meltdowns, a couple of them, and now, we’re honestly, we both needed to do that and come back together. It’s just yummy.”

More about Pink:
Hear Pink’s newest single, ‘F***in’ Perfect’
Pink’s ‘Raise Your Glass’ video toasts to fat girls, gay dudes, and Rosie the Riveter
Pink unveils new song for greatest-hits collection, ‘Raise Your Glass’

Nov 16 2010 06:27 PM ET

With Beatles now on iTunes, who are the last holdouts—and why?

Filed under: Let's Argue!, News and tagged: , , ,

garth-brooks-kid-rockImage Credit: Janet Mayer/PR Photos; Solarpix/PR PhotosMetallica were the first to cave, in mid-2006. In November of 2007, Led Zeppelin followed; in June 2008, Radiohead finally said OK, computer. And yesterday, of course, was the day the Beatles pledged “I Will” to iTunes.

But there are, famously, a few very firm holdouts–artists who refuse to parcel their music for the digital marketplace. Below, the main players, and the reasons they’ve given:

AC/DC: Two years ago, Angus Young explained to the New York Times that they could not abide breaking up their albums for individual track sales: “It’s like an artist who does a painting. If he thinks it’s a great piece of work, he protects it. It’s the same thing: this is our work.”
That same month, frontman Brian Johnson told Reuters, “”Maybe I’m just being old-fashioned, but this iTunes, God bless ‘em, it’s going to kill music if they’re not careful … It’s a…monster, this thing. It just worries me. And I’m sure they’re just doing it all in the interest of making as much…cash as possible. Let’s put it this way, it’s certainly not for the…love, let’s get that out of the way, right away.” (Walmart, however, is all about the love.)

Garth Brooks: Last year, the semi-retired country superstar told writer Lisa L. Rollins,  These [Apple] guys are sweet guys, but they’re businessmen, so they understand. … They truly think that they’re saving music. My hat’s off to them. I looked at them right across the table with all the love in the world and told them they were killing it. And until we get variable pricing, until we get album-only [downloads], then they are not a true retailer for my stuff, and you won’t see my stuff on there—with all the love in the world. That’s nothing that they haven’t heard, either.”

Kid Rock: In a 2008 EW feature, he said ”I just don’t like being told what to do. I don’t have a beef with Apple, or iTunes, or any of them. I do have a beef with that it seems kind of socialist of them to charge the same price for every song. What if every car cost $4,000, you know what I mean? A song from my neighbor’s garage band is not the same value as Bruce Springsteen’s ‘Born to Run.’ I just want to decide how my product gets sold with the people who sell it.” (Kid’s rep confirmed to us today that his views have not changed.)

Also still unavailable: The Smiths (aside from their greatest hits, and a few soundtrack one-offs), ToolDef Leppard, Bob Seger, and the bulk of the Black Sabbath and Frank Zappa catalogs. (iTunes declined to comment for this article.)

Tell us, readers—are these artists hurt by their absence, or is their integrity worth its weight in iBucks? Is the notion of that integrity misplaced? And are fans genuinely affected by the lack of digital availability, or is uploading physical discs into an online library merely a brief chore for a rainy day? Let us know in the comments section below.

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

More from EW.com:
Apple finally gets rights to Beatles catalog on iTunes
Band of Horses’ biker-themed ‘Dilly’ video: Watch it

Nov 16 2010 01:46 PM ET

Band of Horses' biker-themed 'Dilly' video: Watch it

Beardcore rockers Band of Horses have gone all Grindhouse fake trailer in their latest video, a lovingly shot homage to the biker B-movies of the 1970s.

IMDb has a two-day exclusive on the clip, which follows the mustachioed Mojave Desert exploits of the STD (Super Terrific Dancers) gang as they do-si-do and finger-gun their way to cop-shootin’, hog-ridin’, lady-hasslin’ outlaw glory. Click here to watch in full.

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

More from EW.com:
Billy Corgan slams Pavement, calls them ‘the death of the alternative dream’
Apple finally gets rights to Beatles catalog on iTunes
Jay-Z tells us all about his new memoir, ‘Decoded’: ‘It’s a conversation between worlds’

Nov 16 2010 01:20 PM ET

Adam Lambert to release five-song EP 'Acoustic Live'

Filed under: News and tagged: ,

adam-lambert-epJustin Bieber may be going acoustic too, but he’s not doing it in his above-the-waist birthday suit. Adam Lambert announced today that he will release the five-track Acoustic Live! EP this December 6; shoes, shirt, and glove finger-parts optional. (The disc will be digital, with limited-edition physical copies available at adamofficial.com.)

Fans who preorder the album will receive an unplugged versions of “Whataya Want From Me” immediately, as well as a lithograph poster of the cover art. The album itself will feature acoustic versions of songs from his For Your Entertainment, including “Whataya Want From Me” and “Music Again,” (recorded in Germany) and “Aftermath” and “Soaked” (from the Glam Nation tour), as well as the Gary-Jules-via-Tears-for-Fears cover “Mad World,” from his early Idol days.

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

More on Adam Lambert from EW.com:
Adam Lambert loves ‘The Hunger Games’: Could he play Cinna?
Adam Lambert to bullied gay teens: ‘It gets better, but it’s up to you’

Nov 16 2010 12:20 PM ET

Jay-Z tells us all about his new memoir, 'Decoded': 'It's a conversation between worlds'

Filed under: Books, Music and tagged: ,

NYPL-jay-zImage Credit: Jori KleinLast night at the New York Public Library, Jay-Z and noted scholar Cornel West talked for two hours about the rapper’s new memoir, Decoded. Their free-wheeling discussion began with Jay-Z’s life and lyrics and expanded to touch on issues of history, culture, and race in America. They were joined on stage by the Library’s Paul Holdengräber, an eager, earnest fellow with a strong Belgian accent who confessed his relative ignorance of rap before reading Decoded.

Holdengräber’s presence felt slightly awkward at times, but it tied into one of Jay-Z’s chief aims with Decoded: explaining the significance of his words, and of hip-hop as a whole, to outsiders who might not otherwise understand. “It’s a conversation between worlds,” Jay told me as we sat in another opulent chamber of the Library a few minutes before the talk began. “Because at the end of the day, we’re all the same, when you take away the titles of who we are. We all have the same emotions, the same feelings. We’ve got so much more in common than we don’t.”

Jay-Z first announced that he was working on a memoir around the time of 2003′s The Black Album, but he ultimately chose not to publish that early attempt at laying out his life in book form. He sees Decoded as a project of another kind entirely. “This book [is] much more than just an autobiography,” he said. “It’s basically about music and about the power of words — rap as poetry. Then it told the story of a generation of kids. It gave a voice to what we were feeling, emotions we were going through. So it was much more important than just a story about me.” READ FULL STORY »

Nov 15 2010 07:06 PM ET

British import Jessie J: Could she be the next big (nasty) pop star?

Filed under: Music

Ask not what the London-born Jessie J can do for your country (she co-wrote Miley Cyrus’ “Party in the USA”; you’re welcome)—ask what your country can do for her when her debut arrives Stateside in January.

Judging by the 1.6 million-plus pageviews her “Do It Like a Dude” video has gotten in less than a week, it do pretty well. The 22-year-old’s aggro style, Clockwork Orange eyes and general aversion to pants are already garnering comparisons to Gaga, Ke$ha, and Nicky Minaj—though her bedroom a cappella covers and songs like “Sexy Silk” (from the recent Easy A soundtrack) showcase a girl who is less yelly, AutoTuned rasp-talker than full-on R&B belter.

But shoot first with the leotards and black-rhinestone lips, and ask questions later. Watch the borderline-NSFW “Dude” clip after the jump, then tell us what you think—excellent addition to the like-a-boy pantheon (see: Ciara, Beyonce) or lady Fight Club nightmare? READ FULL STORY »

Nov 15 2010 05:59 PM ET

Apple finally gets rights to Beatles catalog on iTunes

Filed under: News and tagged: , ,

iTunes-BeatlesCan’t buy you Beatles on iTunes? That is, after years of negotiations, setbacks, and false starts, about to change. The Wall Street Journal reports that Apple will imminently announce its acquisition of the band’s legendary catalog, famously absent from the digital marketplace since, well, digital was born.

Spokesmen for Apple and EMI refused requests for comment, and insiders say that label EMI could still renege, but if the deal does go through it should be massive for both parties, as well as consumers.

It would also bring to a close a decades-long antagonism between the band and the brand–the former accused the later of infringing on its Apple Corps logo trademark with its own apple icon. (The case was finally resolved in 2006, 28 years after its first filing).

Terms of the deal are still unknown, and may or may not be revealed when Apple makes a much-touted announcement tomorrow morning at 10am EST/7am PST.

UPDATE: It’s true, and it’s pretty much instantaneous; the band’s 13 remastered studio albums, the two-volume Past Masters compilation and the Red and Blue collections are now available on iTunes worldwide as either albums or individual songs. There is also an exclusive box set featuring the band’s first U.S. concert, Live at the Washington Coliseum, 1964.

Here, the chorus of approvals from the official press release: We’re really excited to bring the Beatles’ music to iTunes,” said Sir Paul McCartney. “It’s fantastic to see the songs we originally released on vinyl receive as much love in the digital world as they did the first time around.” “I am particularly glad to no longer be asked when the Beatles are coming to iTunes,” said Ringo Starr. “At last, if you want it-you can get it now-The Beatles from Liverpool to now! Peace and Love, Ringo.”"We love the Beatles and are honored and thrilled to welcome them to iTunes,” said Steve Jobs, Apple’s CEO. “It has been a long and winding road to get here. Thanks to the Beatles and EMI, we are now realizing a dream we’ve had since we launched iTunes ten years ago.”"In the joyful spirit of Give Peace A Chance, I think it is so appropriate that we are doing this on John’s 70th birthday year,” said Yoko Ono Lennon.

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

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
‘Glee’ cast breezes past Beatles’ ‘Billboard’ record
John Lennon’s solo years: A major reissue campaign marks what would have been the Beatle’s 70th birthday

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