Author: EW staff (11-20 of 21)

Apr 11 2011 06:36 PM ET

New Carla Bruni song for charity disc with Sheryl Crow, Roseanne Cash, and more: Hear it here -- EXCLUSIVE

Carla-Bruni

Image Credit: Pascal Le Segretain/Getty Images

In the ’90s, glamazons Carla Bruni and Christy Turlington stalked the high-fashion catwalks and dated rock stars like it was their job—which, as supermodels, it sort of was.

Today, Turlington is a documentary filmmaker and activist for maternal health through her Every Mother Counts foundation, and Bruni is, famously, the First Lady of France, and also a platinum-selling singer-songwriter.

Now the two are reunited via Turlington’s (now Turlington Burns’) upcoming No Woman No Cry, a film following four at-risk pregnant women around the world.

Bruni, along with Patti Scialfa, Sheryl Crow, Angelique Kidjo, Roseanne Cash, and Martha Wainwright, contribute to the album, a companion piece to the documentary, which is set to premiere on the OWN Network on May 7.

Find Bruni’s gentle, lovely  “Le Loup, La Biche et Le Chevalier (Une Chanson Douce)” after the jump:

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Feb 17 2011 04:35 PM ET

Blink 182's Travis Barker talks new album, tour: 'It's definitely coming close'

blink-182Image Credit: Simone Joyner/Getty ImagesNot only is the long-awaited Blink-182 album almost-kinda-nearly finished, but drummer Travis Barker says the band might actually hit the road for a full tour—not just the short run of overseas dates they announced last November.

“We are talking about taking Kid Cudi out for an amazing tour we may have planned for later this year,” Barker told MTV News.That’s coming on the heels of Barker saying the band’s new album—their first in eight years—will be finished in “June or July.”

“Here’s the thought process for the album,”said Barker, who will also release his solo outing Give the Drummer Some on March 15. “Build 20 songs, pick 12 we love, and then concentrate on those 12 songs until they’re done, and then our album’s finished. And it’s definitely coming close … I think it’s where you would think Blink would be right now if you left off with our last album with us, and you follow each of our careers, and you know what we’ve done [since].”

Either way, June or July is still far enough from now for us to feel like we wouldn’t bet the mortgage on its summertime arrival. But what do you think, Blink fans? Tell us in the comments section, below.

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

More on EW.com:
Travis Barker reveals star-studded guest list for solo debut
Blink 182 announce first arena tour in seven years

Nov 8 2010 01:14 PM ET

Train's new song in Coca Cola ad: Watch the spot exclusively here

TRAINIn a year that already saw match-ups with R&B space oddity Janelle Monae and Somali-Canadian star K’Naan, Coca Cola has paired once again with a musical artist to create an original ad song–this time, San Francisco pop rockers Train.

Stream the band’s “Shake Up Christmas” spot after the jump (and find the full song on their official YouTube channel here) : READ FULL STORY »

Nov 2 2010 04:23 PM ET

Weezer's 'Pinkerton' reissue: Read the 2001 EW story where Rivers Cuomo called the now-classic album a 'hugely painful mistake'

weezer_pinkertonToday a two-CD deluxe reissue of Weezer‘s 1996 second album, Pinkerton, hit stores. That’s good news: it’s one of the great albums of the 1990s, an alt-rock masterpiece that embeds almost unbearably raw emotion inside singalong tunes that still sound thrilling 14 years later. At the time, however, it was a big flop, with most fans and critics recoiling at its unpolished sound and over-share lyrics. In recent interviews, Cuomo seems proud of the album, but at the time its critical and commercial rejection was a huge blow. EW talked to him when the band’s third album came out in 2001, and the singer essentially disowned Pinkerton as a “hideous record.” “It was such a hugely painful mistake that happened in front of hundreds of thousands of people and continues to happen on a grander and grander scale and just won’t go away,” he told us. “It’s like getting really drunk at a party and spilling your guts in front of everyone and feeling incredibly great and cathartic about it, and then waking up the next morning and realizing what a complete fool you made of yourself.”

In the story, Cuomo also talked about the dark, scary period after Pinkerton when he retreated from the outside world and the band nearly fell apart. Read an excerpt after the jump, or check out the whole story here. READ FULL STORY »

Aug 20 2010 09:00 AM ET

T-Pain's iPod: The 'Lottery Ticket' co-star tells us about his favorite artists

T-Pain-Lottery-TicketImage Credit: David LeeAuto-Tune-loving singer T-Pain is donning a new (top) hat: Feature film actor. He plays the convenience store cashier who sells the winning ticket in new comedy Lottery Ticket, which also stars Bow Wow and Ice Cube.

With Lottery Ticket opening today, we asked T-Pain to name five artists whose music he’s digging. Read his list after the jump and hit the comments let us know what you think of his taste in tunes. READ FULL STORY »

Apr 15 2010 11:37 AM ET

Josh Schwartz shares his favorite Coachella memories

josh-schwartzImage Credit: Albert L. Ortega/PR Photos Josh Schwartz (the guy behind Chuck, Gossip Girl, and The OC) is a huge fan of the Coachella music festival, which this year runs from April 16-18 and features headliners Jay-Z, Muse, and Gorillaz. Below, he shares some of his highlights.

I was never allowed to celebrate Christmas. This void in my childhood left me on a decades-long search for a holiday I could call my own. On a balmy weekend in October, 1999, as a college senior, I found what I had been looking for. And unlike Christmas, this one had good music (all apologies to Mannheim Steamroller). It was called Coachella.

In the years since, Coachella has become an exodus from reality, a celebration of music, an endurance test, a snapshot of the zeitgeist, and, as I anticipate my 11th trip to Indio, a college reunion of sorts. It is, at times, unbearably hot, incredibly crowded, and nearly impossible to navigate. At others, it is magical: a near spiritual adventure that brings together people of all ages, backgrounds, and body odors to hear the best bands in the world. Here is a look back on some Coachellas past.

YEAR ONE: The journey to the first Coachella was like landing on an exotic undiscovered island. Wide-open polo fields lit by glow sticks and a full moon, where one could run freely from one pre-millennial act to the next. To me and my friends, it was love at first sight. Not so much for the girl I had brought with me, hoping to use this weekend to act upon a summer-long crush. When I awoke Monday morning, she was gone, leaving me to make the long drive back to Los Angeles alone. Not even this temporary heartbreak could get in the way of my new long-term relationship.

ONE-TWO PUNCH: I doubt that the rest of my concert-going life will ever see a back-to-back performance like the 2004 pairing of the Pixies into Radiohead. It was epic and unforgettable, and remains the high-water mark of all Coachellas.

A STAR IS BORN: There are moments where the perfect band takes the stage at the perfect time and a harmony of music and destiny sweep over the crowd. In 2005, as the sun was setting, through a golden hued haze, Arcade Fire swept the second stage. Their performance was an incendiary proclamation to all witnesses — a major new band had arrived. No one could match their numbers, or their passion.

BEHIND THE SCENES: We wrapped the first season of The OC in April, 2004. To celebrate, I convinced some of the cast members to attend their first Coachella. They loved it, until after the concert, when we discovered we’d been abandoned by our taxi home. The gridlock exiting the parking lot meant it would be hours before a new ride could rescue us. We didn’t despair. Instead, an impromptu game of stickball was organized, one that made the time fly by. One of my favorite memories from the OC experience.

THE ONE: Bringing the woman who would one day be my wife to her first Coachella in 2006 was a high-pressure situation. What if she hated it? Could the relationship handle it? But as I watched her fight the crowds with me to get close to Bloc Party in the Gobi tent and witnessed her reverie during a transcendent Sigur Ros main-stage performance, I knew Coachella was telling me I had the right partner — for future Coachella weekends, and for the rest of my life.

(Follow the Music Mix on Twitter @EWMusicMix.)

More from EW.com’s Music Mix:
Maxwell keeps it retro in ‘Fistful of Tears’ video: Watch it here
Roky Erickson: The psychedelic rock legend talks about his first CD in 15 years
Why is Sir Ian McKellen muttering about “sexual gladiators” on the new Scissor Sisters single?
Broadway star Laura Bell Bundy kicks off her ‘crazy’ country career: A Music Mix Q&A

Dec 3 2009 08:00 AM ET

Exclusive: 'Gossip Girl' co-creator Josh Schwartz gives us his take on the albums that defined the decade

For Entertainment Weekly’s Best of the Decade special issue, we asked some of the sharpest minds in film and television to give us their take on the past ten years. Josh Schwartz, creator of The O.C. and co-creator of Gossip Girl and Chuck, shared his insights into how and why America became Playlist Nation in the 2000s, and how the rise of digital music threatened to kill the album, but ultimately didn’t. To prove his point, Josh gave EW.com this exclusive list of the albums he feels best defined the decade. To read Josh Schwartz’s full essay on the decade in music, pick up the current issue of EW, on stands now.

In our new Playlist Nation, many felt the age of the album was over, with shuffle-happy listeners too busy downloading singles and ringtones. This is an attempt to present ten albums that defied that trend and defined this decade.  Hopefully they will be heard for a long, long time.  And no matter when you hear them, they will transport you back to this time. —Josh Schwartz

Best Albums by the Defining Artists of the ’00s

Radiohead, Kid A

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Jay-Z, The Blueprint

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[Schwartz's list continues after the jump...]
READ FULL STORY »

Sep 29 2009 02:04 PM ET

Guilty Pleasures bracket results: And the greatest guilty-pleasure artist of all time is...

Ah, what an epic battle it’s been! Already it seems like a distant point lost in the mists of recollection, that day when we first asked for your nominations for the greatest guilty pleasure act of all time. Since then, you’ve voted. You’ve argued. (And argued, and argued…) Some of you have even attempted to subvert the integrity of the polling process. And eight weeks after that first call for nominees, we finally have a winner. Ladies and gentlemen, the greatest guilty-pleasure artist of all time, according to your own votes, is…Phish.

Yes, those four jamtastic Vermonters — having already dispatched Nickelback, Mariah Carey, Ace of Base, and Barry Manilow — took a resounding 76 percent of the vote in their final face-off against the decades-spanning guilty-pleasure entity known as George Michael/Wham! That’s what we call a landslide.

So congratulations, Phish fans! By whatever means necessary, you’ve won this thing. You can now officially feel more guilty about liking your favorite band than any other fan base in the universe. Enjoy that.

Of course, while this competition has reached an end, that’s no reason to stop talking about it. Go back to the completed bracket to re-live this momentous journey we’ve all taken together, then let the retroactive sniping begin: Does Phish deserve this honor, or do you think your favorite guilty-pleasure artist got short-changed? Have at it in the comments section.

More from EW’s Music Mix:
Guilty Pleasures on the Music Mix
Bruce Springsteen to perform three albums in their entirety at last ever Giants Stadium shows
Adam Lambert burns up the pre-sale album charts
Thom Yorke’s new band

Sep 11 2009 01:00 AM ET

The Best Beatles Songs, 25-1

Tags:

25. I’M A LOSER (1964, Beatles for Sale)

One of the jolliest — and saddest — cries for help ever.

24-1 after the jump…

READ FULL STORY »

Sep 10 2009 01:01 AM ET

The Best Beatles Songs, 50-26

Tags:

50. ALL YOU NEED IS LOVE (1967, Magical Mystery Tour)

Everything the Beatles stood for, summed up in those five simple words…

49-26 after the jump…

READ FULL STORY »

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