Showing posts with label Rolling Stone. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Rolling Stone. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 13, 2016

Katy Perry on music tie-up with Swift : If she says sorry, sure!



Katy Perry is “open” to collaborating with Taylor Swift on a new song, but on one condition.

In a response to a fan’s curious question about whether she can collaborate with Swift on a new chart-topping single, the “Rise” singer responded by tweeting, “if she says sorry, sure!”


There has been bad blood between the two singers for years—to think that, according to E! Online, the two singers were once close buddies who attended the Grammy Awards together and praised each other all the time. In fact, Perry, 31, passionately duetted with Swift, 26, in her concert at Los Angeles back in 2010.

Sadly, their friendship turned topsy-turvy when three of Swift’s backup dancers left her 1989 world tour in 2013 to join Perry’s tour, leaving Swift in a furious mode. In a 2014  interview with Rolling Stone, the “Bad Blood” singer lamented about a fellow artist who “robbed” several members of her staff. “It had to do with business. She basically tried to sabotage an entire arena tour. She tried to hire a bunch of people out from under me,” Swift said.

“For years, I was never sure if we were friends or not,” Swift further exclaimed. “She would come up to me at awards shows and say something and walk away, and I would think, ‘Are we friends, or did she just give me the harshest insult of my life?'”

Sensing Swift is throwing some shade at her, Perry posted a cryptic tweet on Sept. 9, in which fans speculated was a “swift” lash against Swift. “Watch out for Regina George in Sheep’s clothing…” she said.  Gianna Francesca Catolico
 
Watch out for the Regina George in sheep's clothing…

— KATY PERRY (@katyperry) September 9, 2014
 
source: entertainment.inquirer.net

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Karmin Win Rolling Stone's Women Who Rock Contest


The votes are tallied and Rolling Stone is pleased to announce Karmin as the winner of our “Women Who Rock” flip cover contest.

In partnership with Garnier Fructis, Rolling Stone's “Women Who Rock” contest celebrates the diverse array of female artists currently dominating the music world. Karmin singer Amy Heidemann will grace the flip cover of the iconic “Women Who Rock” issue, on newsstands Sept. 28th, and the duo is featured in the magazine along with other female musicians.

Karmin took the internet by storm last year after posting a cover of Chris Brown's "Look at Me Now" on YouTube. The clip instantly went viral and became one of YouTube's most viewed videos of 2011. The duo has since released debut album Hello and racked up over half a billion views for their videos.




"Congratulations to Karmin!" says Nathan Brackett, Rolling Stone Deputy Managing Editor. "They approached the 'Women Who Rock' contest like they've approached the rest of their career – with a lot of hard work, enthusiasm and a real grassroots talent for connecting with their fans. They've earned this."





Garnier Fructis is the sponsor of the "Women Who Rock" contest. Garnier Fructis' stylists worked with the acts throughout the competition to help them discover and establish individual styles both on- and off-stage. Garnier Fructis was also instrumental in helping Karmin become cover-ready.

For more on the "Women Who Rock" flip cover contest winner, as well as runner-up Rita Ora, visit RollingStone.com/WomenWhoRock.


Monday, July 16, 2012

No Doubt Cast Themselves As Truckers in 'Settle Down' Video


When No Doubt finished recording Push and Shove, their first album in more than ten years, they turned to esteemed director and good friend Sophie Muller to direct the video for "Settle Dow." "I’ve worked with them so long, it was kind of natural that I would do this one," Muller tells Rolling Stone of the clip, premering tonight at 8 p.m. on E!. "They sent me this song and said 'Do you like this?' And I was like, 'Yeah, I love it.'"


Muller, who has worked with Eurythmics, Coldplay, and Sade, has directed eight videos for No Doubt throughout their career including "Don’t Speak" and "Simple Kind of Life." "We collaborate completely," she says. "I’ve become friends with them. When you have a working relationship with a band, it’s a very comfortable and lovely process."

In the video for "Settle Down," No Doubt cast themselves as truck drivers as they steer their own highly stylized rigs to a celebratory reunion party. "I think (bassist Tony Kanal) came up with the idea that we should do something with trucks," Muller says. "The idea is they are all driving to meet after having had their separate lives over the last 10 years."

To honor his heritage, Kanal drives a garishly decorated Indian-style truck to the party. Drummer Adrian Young has his kit fastened to the top of what Muller describes as a neon Transformer. Overflowing with speakers is the Jamaican-flavored rig of guitarist Tom Dumont. And Gwen Stefani drives a "proper, old-fashioned Seventies truck" that the band lifted straight from the 1977 Burt Reynolds comedy Smokey and the Bandit.

"It’s such a mix of cultures, their band, and what their music is like," Muller says. "We tried to do something that resembled different parts of the world rather than a specific place."

Although there’s a joyous atmosphere throughout, Muller said she tried to portray the uncertainty in Stefani’s lyrics.

"Lyrically it’s not really a party song," she says. "It’s got a real emotional desire to get through something. You have a combination of this party feel with her struggle to be able to express herself."

In addition to helping cultivate the image of female icons such as Courtney Love and Annie Lennox, Sophie Muller has worked alongside Stefani on both No Doubt and her solo material.

"The amazing thing about Gwen is her unbelievable enthusiasm," Muller says. "You could feel her absolute love for making videos and her total commitment to every single scene that she does. It’s just lovely."

source: rollingstone.com

Wednesday, May 2, 2012

Q&A: Alanis Morissette on Her New LP, 'Kinship' With Leonardo DiCaprio

Alanis Morissette announced today that she'll release her seventh album, Havoc And Bright Lights, on August 28th. The record is Morissette's first in four years and the first since she gave birth to her son, Ever Imre, in late 2010. While motherhood is definitely a theme on the new album, Havoc also tackles many of the topics that Morissette's fans have come to expect, from social issues to spirituality.

"What I love the most now in listening back is that it covers the gamut of everything I care about," Morissette told Rolling Stone when we recently visited her in the studio in Los Angeles. While the LP's subject matter often gets intimate, the six songs that Morissette previewed in the studio are big and rocking. "Kind of epic, hair blowing in the wind," said Morisette, when asked how she plans to play the new tunes in concert.

Many of the new songs have big choruses. Did you let loose a bit more than usual with this record?
To be honest I wrote it post-partum the whole few months after my son was born, so I barely remember the process [laughs]. It was in our home, and we built a makeshift studio in what is now the playroom because I'm an attachment parent, so I wanted to be able to breastfeed. So it was literally in and out of this room, writing with Guy Sigsworth, recording, being a mom, back and forth in my house. I barely remember it and I wouldn't say I was letting loose, but I was having fun.

In "Celebrity," you call out people for their obsession with fame. It seems very much based on real people.
Yes. It was inspired by specific people that I'll never talk about, 'cause it's just rude. Do I appreciate the idea of jealousy, revenge and all these so-called dark qualities? Yes. Do I write these songs in order to engage in some public war with someone? No. And also, as with any song I've ever written, I'm also busting my own chops. This isn't just finger pointing at one human being – it could well be a composite, and the composite includes me.

Did any particular songs emerge that surprised you?
I think some of the loftier ones, like "Edge of Evolution." There are a couple of super lofty ones, and there was the option of not having those songs on the record, but I thought, "Who cares?" If you want to be entertained and you don't want to focus on the lyrics, you have that option. But if you want to be challenged and engage in the conversation that I happen to be in once in a while, this is my record.

When I first heard "Lens" it seemed like a relationship song, but there's a much bigger picture to it.
It's micro and macro, and I like that about a lot of the songs I write. It is about the one-on-one because that's most micro, close to my heart, tangible. But then it can be extrapolated to speak to the larger relationship – relationship with self, with someone's version of spirit, with each other.

The song can be read as a comment on political discourse and religious discourse.
I don't separate church and state, so rather than necessarily addressing a political conversation, I'll address the spiritual underpinnings of it – because I do believe they're bedfellows. Your political views really denote your spiritual views. And America, I think, is largely devoid of a prioritized spiritual [view], whether it's practice or a belief that is based on love and based on kindness, as the Dalai Lama talks about. It's almost like religion is co-opted by the political, ego, fear-fueled machine in our own selves or political structure, so it becomes a tool for the political campaign that's winning as opposed to, "How does it personally show up in one's life? How does it show up in your living room at 7 a.m. when no one's around?" I'd rather talk to people about their personal spiritual practices or what they believe love is. I'm born to do that. Could I enter into the political realm and dive into that? Sure, but I don't think I would want to do that.

"Woman Down" is another one that has massive spiritual and religious implications, but it's also topical. When Rush Limbaugh called Sarah Fluke a slut, were you tempted to throw it up online?
It does speak to what's going on and then it also speaks to what was going on and where we're going, some of which I know about topically and some I don't. So there's some naivety here and there, and then there's the part of me that knows exactly what's going on. As I enter more into the promotional part of this whole journey I'll be more aware of what's going on, 'cause I've been under a rock for a while. For me to comment on pop culture or politics I have to be somewhat informed, but not so much informed to the point I'm beleaguered by it all. I do believe that artists are social commentators to some degree – we have that opportunity.

They're also forced into it sometimes.
You're the screen upon which people project their vehement opinions or even light ones, and I think that's great because people define themselves in accordance to celebrities all the time. And so you're an unwitting activist. To the degree that you want to be an activist, it will either drag you through kicking and screaming or you can just consciously become one – and still be kicking and screaming [laughs].

It has to be scary at times, though.
It's scary, it's exhausting, it's daunting, it's beautiful. Some small percent is quite beautiful. It also requires the celebrities to be quite steely unless they want to get tossed about. And we see that all the time, too. I've seen it in myself and I've seen it in other celebrities. It's exhausting and we need protection.

Your Jagged Little Pill album sold millions upon millions of copies. Even with Adele, it's not likely that anyone will hit those kinds of numbers again.
I have a unique perspective that perhaps people like Eminem and Leonardo DiCaprio share. There are certain people who are in my generation who were in the hot kitchen the same time as me, and whether I know them or not is incidental. I just feel we have this wink with each other. There's a kinship because we were in a similar era in the hot kitchen.

How many of them have you met?
I've met a handful of them, and a handful of them I've never met and I almost don't need to, because we're in this club whether we show up for the club events or not [laughs]. So I'm heartened by knowing that they exist and they're still here, because for me, I had a pretty large amount of PTSD after that chapter that I'm still twitching from.

Are you also heartened by the way other people have handled that success?
Do I look at Leonardo DiCaprio post-Titanic and want to give him a medal for still being here? Yes.

Can any musician today build the kind of fanbase that you and Eminem did?
The thing you can't underestimate is the true fan's intimacy. So Lady Gaga or anybody's true fan, I don't think they're going anywhere. There are people who are into commitment. If they're connecting with an artist, I think they'll be there over the long course.

What do you take from this record when you hear it?
There is a lack of apology for the kind of person I am. I used to have some shame around my Ph.D, psychological part and shame about being spiritual, or shame about being emotional or sensitive. And what I know now, or what I feel now, is that I don't have shame for those parts. It might piss people off or rub them the wrong way or have them roll their eyes. I don't care.

source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/q-a-alanis-morissette-on-her-new-lp-kinship-with-leonardo-dicaprio-20120502

Thursday, April 26, 2012

Gregg Allman Delays Book Tour for Cardiac Testing

Gregg Allman will undergo diagnostic cardiac testing tomorrow at the Mayo Clinic's campus in Jacksonsville, Florida to determine whether he needs additional care stemming from his recent hernia operation. Allman received a liver transplant at the same facility back in 2010.

As a result of this testing, Allman will delay the publicity tour for his forthcoming memoir, My Cross to Bear. "I've been working on the book for years and am grateful for all the support I've received in putting it together," the rocker said in a statement. "As soon as doctors give me the thumbs up to go back on the road, I will be heading out onto my book tour and I can’t wait to meet all of my fans." Allman was set to appear on The Colbert Report and Piers Morgan Tonight.

Allman's summer tour with the Allman Brothers Band is not expected to be affected by this testing. The band recently sold out a run of concerts at the Beacon Theatre in Manhattan and will announce more tour dates on May 1st.

An exclusive excerpt from My Cross to Bear appears in the new issue of Rolling Stone, on newsstands Friday.

source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/gregg-allman-delays-book-tour-for-cardiac-testing-20120426

Wednesday, March 21, 2012

KISS and Motley Crue Announce 'The Tour'

KISS and Mötley Crüe gathered today at L.A.'s Roosevelt Hotel to announce "The Tour," a joint summer package that kicks off July 20th in Bristow, Virginia and runs through September 23rd in Hartford, Connecticut. Each band will play about 90 minutes and KISS will close every night.

Calling it "The Tour" is a bold proclamation. But after more than 60 combined years on the road, both bands feel comfortable with living up to that title. "You will scream your head off until it’s no longer on your shoulder and then you’ll feel great. You’ll be drenched, exhausted, and completely satisfied without ever having anyone touch your schmekel," Gene Simmons told Rolling Stone.

KISS' Paul Stanley has loftier goals though, namely surpassing the band's reputation as one of the great live acts. "What we’re hoping for, and certainly I am, is whatever people’s expectations are, we blow them out of the water," Stanley told Rolling Stone. "I want people to hope for the legend that they’ve heard about and find out it’s greater than that. I think that the longer we’re around the more invincible we become."

This marks the first time the two acts have shared the same stage since Crüe opened five dates for KISS on 1982, 30 years ago. And while Crüe have since become hard rock icons in their own right, they are still the same KISS fans as back then. In a joint conversation with RS, Crue drummer Tommy Lee turned to KISS drummer Eric Singer and asked, "Are you guys gonna play 'Firehouse'?'" When Singer responded yeah cause Simmons was gonna blow fire, Lee's inner child started air drumming. "I fucking love that song," he said, tapping his hands excitedly.

The admiration and respect are mutual. "I'm a big Mötley Crue fan," Singer said. "I've always been a fan of Tommy's and a fan of the band, so I think it's really cool."

A double bill of KISS and Mötley Crüe promises to be over the top, "Elvis on steroids," it was called in the press conference. "I want people to leave and go, so this is what rock & roll is," Stanley said. "It’s dangerous, it’s loose, it’s not perfect. So whatever pop artist you see dancing around on a stage lip synching, that’s a con game and that’s not a live concert. If you want karaoke, go to a karaoke bar."

Simmons fired shots at pop singers in the press conference, saying, "We're sick and tired of girls getting up there with dancers and karaoke tapes in back of them. No fake bullshit. Leave that to the Rihanna, Smhianna and anyone who ends their name with an 'A.'"

Crüe's Nikki Sixx didn't disagree, but took the more positive route, hoping it inspires young fans to see two bands who've persevered in both up and down times. "What I would like to see people take away from it is that if you actually practice your instrument and practice writing songs and put a hundred percent into your show and every aspect of it, from your clothes to your lyrics, if your singers sing, then this is what happens – you have a long career and you get to go out and do the real deal," he told us. "It’s real rock & roll."

Lee suggested those youngsters seeing both bands for the first time will be speechless. "They're gonna be tripping, for somebody who hasn't seen either band," he said. "They're gonna be walking out of there flipped out. I would."

It was the always quotable Simmons though who summed up what people can expect from a night with Mötley Crüe and KISS. "Come out, we’ll blow shit up, go home and fuck your girlfriend, that’s it," he said. That's exactly what we'd hope for.

source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/kiss-and-motley-crue-announce-the-tour-20120321

Thursday, March 15, 2012

No Rolling Stones tour despite 50th anniversary

NEW YORK — The Rolling Stones are staying put this year, Rolling Stone reported Wednesday, leaving fans to look forward instead to a major documentary marking the rock band’s 50th anniversary.

“Basically, we’re just not ready” for a fresh concert tour, guitarist Keith Richards told the pop culture magazine, adding that 2013 was the group’s “more realistic” target for hitting the road.

Quoting other, unidentified sources, Rolling Stone cited worries about Richards’ health in the wake of a head injury he sustained in Fiji in 2006 as one reason for the band to stay close to home.

“They don’t want to do a full tour,” a concert industry source told the biweekly magazine. “They don’t want to travel, and there are concerns about Keith’s health.”

On their website, the Stones announced Wednesday the upcoming release of “a groundbreaking and eye-opening documentary,” directed by Brett Morgen, covering the history of the band from its founding in London in 1962 to today.

“The film will be showcased in September as part of the Rolling Stones 50th anniversary celebrations,” said the website, without elaboration.

Rolling Stone said the Stones reassembled in a London studio in December to play together for the first time since their Bigger Bang tour ended in 2007—with bassist Bill Wyman sitting in for the first time since he quit in 1992.

“We played a lot of blues and outtakes of ‘Some Girls’ and things like that,” it quoted lead singer Mick Jagger as saying. “It went very well.”

Whether Wyman would join them on the road in 2013 was still not resolved.

“I think he’s up for it,” Richards said. “We talked about it.”

source: japantoday.com

Monday, March 12, 2012

Dave Matthews Unplugs for Charity

Los Angeles sees a lot of parties and intimate performances, but John Varvatos' annual Stuart House benefit, held at his West Hollywood store and the surrounding street, is a special one. Held in the daytime with a kids' tent, it creates an incredibly relaxed atmosphere, one that makes for some very intimate celebrations.

The 2012 edition featuring Dave Matthews was so low-key that Avatar star Zoe Saldana was near the front of the stage, dancing throughout the set. So mellow that Alice Cooper and Breaking Bad star Bryan Cranston held an uninterrupted summit of cool in the Varvatos store with neither fans nor security in sight.

That mood absolutely carries over to the performances. A few years ago Chris Cornell, who, like Matthews, had appeared in a Varvatos ad campaign, performed unplugged, busting out covers like "Hotel California." Unplugged in daylight, you never know what you might get.

Varvatos was hoping for the unexpected from Matthews. "I’m looking for Dave to pull something out of the bag of tricks there and surprise us all, something I haven’t heard him do in a while, something I haven’t heard him do in an intimate setting," the designer told Rolling Stone.

Cooper, out to support fellow Detroiter Varvatos, had some of his own songs he thought Matthews could do if he went the cover route. "There are a bunch," Cooper told us. "More the mid-tempo stuff, something like 'Poison' or 'Is It My Body.' That would be something good for him, a little sexier. I don’t think he would do the hard rock stuff, but even the ballads, 'I Never Cry,' 'You and Me' or 'Only Women Bleed,' he could probably do pretty well."

Much as we would have loved to see Matthews rock some Cooper numbers, there were no covers. But Varvatos definitely got his wish: Matthews said early on during his set that he was going to play some stuff he hadn't played in a while, joking, "If I make mistakes, I did it on purpose, because I'm an artist."

Among the songs he broke out in a 40-minute set were a sterling, mistake-free "#41," "Stay or Leave," "You And Me" (his own, not Cooper's) and "Crush." Matthews had a lot of fun with the setting, telling the crowd that he's been working on a new album and weaving jokes and stories in between performances. At one point he gave a shout-out to a little girl seated on her father's shoulders.

He closed with a new song written in Chicago, he said, while with his family. He told of picking up the "guy-tar" while his family was about to go swimming. His little boy asked him if he was coming. "But I was selfish," Matthews said. "I've been swimming with him since." The result was a new song he said "I think is about swimming. It's got some drinking references in it, too."

Stuart House is part of the Santa Monica Rape Treatment Center, explained Varvatos. "It treats kids who have been sexually abused," he said. "They’re at the forefront in terms of working with children and trying to help them through. We’ve just been here as a conduit to help raise money and get the awareness up."

The event raised over $700,000. After Matthews finished his set, he headed over to the packed kids' tent to entertain them.

source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/dave-matthews-unplugs-for-charity-20120312

Monday, March 5, 2012

Exclusive Stream: Pink Floyd, 'Young Lust' ('The Wall' Work In Progress Pt. 1)

Click to listen to Pink Floyd's 'Young Lust'

Pink Floyd's opus, The Wall, is now available in a special "Immersion" edition – 7 discs! – featuring video footage from the band's 1980 tour, a Behind The Wall documentary, a live recording of songs from the album and CDs of Roger Waters' original demos and the band's works-in-progress. Rolling Stone has an exclusive stream of the band demo of "Young Lust," one of the album's hardest rockers. The starker demo version emphasizes the song's funky bass line and a toned-down, almost relaxed vocal.

source: http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/exclusive-stream-pink-floyd-young-lust-the-wall-work-in-progress-pt-1-20120305

Tuesday, May 24, 2011

Rolling Stone Celebrates Bob Dylan's 70th Birthday

Today, March 24, 2011 is Bob Dylan's 70th birthday. Bob Dylan is one of the most creative and inspired musicians in the World.

Bob Dylan has remained, along with James Brown, the most influential American musician rock & roll has ever produced. In a career that lasted for more than five decades, Dylan has won nine Grammy awards, been initiated in the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and won an Academy Award for song on the soundtrack of the film Wonder Boys.


Rolling Stone Magazine with Bob Dylan on the cover and published a list of their top 70 Bob Dylan songs from his 50-year recording carreer as well as Bono Bob Weir and Lucinda Williams, Mick Jagger, Lenny Kravitz to tell and explain their favorite Dylan songs, plus a challenging Dylan trivia quiz.


Bob Dylan is a great artist, an icon above all icons and truly a LEGEND!