Thursday 14 August 2008

Wilco gives Outtasite Tanglewood show

LENOX - Rock �n� roll is defined by excess. Invented by kids who wanted r & b, blues and country to be louder, faster and billy Wilder, rock has continually noted overindulgence. Then along comes auteur Jeff Tweedy, decision making to define rock by restraint.


It�s a bold, well-nigh stupid mind. But it gives Tweedy a rule to make art by, and a rule to break at perfect moments, which he did at Wilco�s jam-packed Tuesday demonstrate at Tanglewood.


Dressed in tawdry, retro rhinestone-studded suits, the Chicago sestet took to the Boston Symphony�s summer stage on a gorgeous night, gap with the subtle, sweet �Either Way.� The song�s gentle tonal pattern and guitarist Nels Cline�s jazz tone made the band heavy subdued sufficiency to open for James Taylor. Through �Hummingbird,� �Remember the Mountain Bed� and �Muzzle of Bees,� Tweedy and troupe adhered strictly to his aesthetic of restraint.




Then, somewhere during the middle of �You Are My Face,� Tweedy allow Cline dynamite a sonic levee by releasing a solo that flooded Tanglewood with a barbaric burl of notes and feedback. From here Tweedy lento eased his restrictions, generally by rental Cline mash up Wes Montgomery and Sonic Youth (and on occasion jumping in himself).


But it was during �I Am Trying to Break Your Heart,� the epic opener of �Yankee Hotel Foxtrot,� that Tweedy first permitted his band to indulge completely and freely in a herald of ear-bleeding dissonance.


This is Tweedy�s large trick: track record minor masterpieces of albums where the melodies ar purposely flat and the songwriting is skimmed of the fat rock thrives on, so the contrastive live eruptions hit a crowd with a forcefulness that would make thrash-metal bands envious.


Tweedy then bounced back and forth 'tween flattened, still sublime melodies (�Pieholden Suite,� �California Stars,� �Summerteeth�) and rule-breaking bursts to occupy out an almost two-hour set.


Because Tweedy�s still got a stone �n� roll heart, he encored with 40 transactions of uptempo, straight-ahead rock aided by the Total Pros� horns: �The Late Greats,� �Heavy Metal Drummer,� �Outtasite (Outta Mind)� and �I�m Wheel.�


Andrew Bird opened with his impressive, valued folk-rock picayune and whistling - he whistles with the science of a jazz horn player, though sadly this means cloying Kenny G lines to go with cool Chet Baker ones. Backed by a drummer and two multi-instumentalists, Bird showed off his exceptional melodic skills and near-virtuoso playing, most notably on �Tables and Chairs.�


WILCO, with ANDREW BIRD at Tanglewood, Lenox, Tuesday night.





More info

Wednesday 6 August 2008

Gordon Lightfoot

Gordon Lightfoot   
Artist: Gordon Lightfoot

   Genre(s): 
Retro
   Other
   



Discography:


36 All-Time Favorites (CD 3)   
 36 All-Time Favorites (CD 3)

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 12


36 All-Time Favorites (CD 1)   
 36 All-Time Favorites (CD 1)

   Year: 1993   
Tracks: 12


Original Lightfoot (CD 3)   
 Original Lightfoot (CD 3)

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 12


Original Lightfoot (CD 2)   
 Original Lightfoot (CD 2)

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 23


Original Lightfoot (CD 1)   
 Original Lightfoot (CD 1)

   Year: 1992   
Tracks: 25


Don Quixote   
 Don Quixote

   Year: 1972   
Tracks: 11


The Complete Greatest Hits   
 The Complete Greatest Hits

   Year:    
Tracks: 1


Songbook (CD 4)   
 Songbook (CD 4)

   Year:    
Tracks: 21


Songbook (CD 3)   
 Songbook (CD 3)

   Year:    
Tracks: 21


Songbook (CD 2)   
 Songbook (CD 2)

   Year:    
Tracks: 22


Songbook (CD 1)   
 Songbook (CD 1)

   Year:    
Tracks: 24


Harmony   
 Harmony

   Year:    
Tracks: 11




Canadian Gordon Lightfoot low gear began to gain recognition in the mid-'60s as a songwriter when his compositions "For Lovin' Me" and "Early Morning Rain" became hits for Peter, Paul & Mary, and Marty Robbins topped the nation charts with "Ribbon of Darkness." Lightfoot's own trend was unpretentious, his neat folk music arrangements topped by a blue burr of a voice. His albums began to appear in 1966, only it was non until the start of the '70s that he became a big success as a performer, grading in 1970 with Sit Down Young Stranger, which contained his attain "If You Could Read My Mind," a song with a typically flow melodious line and mildly poetical lyrics.


Thenceforth, the offset half of the '70s were his. Lightfoot impinge on a peak in 1974 with Sunset, which went to number 1, as did the title song when released on a single. Though he had developed a dateless style, Lightfoot was caught by the popular decline of folk-based music in the latter half of the 1970s, and has performed and recorded less ofttimes since, sometimes trying to conform to perceived commercial-grade trends without success. But concert appearances in the other '90s confirmed that he remained an engaging performing artist and that his catalogue of original songs was concentrated to twin. A Painter Passing Through was released in 1998.


In 2002 Lightfoot suffered a near-fatal abdominal haemorrhage spell playacting in his hometown of Orillia, Ontario, causing him to cancel his strike enlistment. When he awoke from a coma weeks later, the coherent artist immediately began pick tracks from the 18 demos he'd recorded in 2001 and urged his band to flesh them out in the studio. Harmony, his 20th album, was released in May of






Friday 27 June 2008

Big Boi Isn't Sweating His 'Hottest MCs' Exclusion; Shawty Lo Proves 50 Cent Wrong: Mixtape Monday




Artist: Bishop Lamont

Representing: Aftermath/ the West Coast

Mixtape: The Confessional

411: Produced by Dr. Dre and Oprah Winfrey? That is going to be one album we have to hear.

"Don't just check out Oprah's Book Club," Bishop Lamont advised, sitting in the studio with DJ Quik not too far in the background. "Holla at her for beats too."

You can never get a totally straight answer from Lamont. His latest mixtape, The Confessional, landed last week, and it's been a highly controversial journey. In an online video, Bishop claims that DJ Strong basically stole the masters and sold them to bootleggers. The video shows their confrontation, and while Strong doesn't admit to the atrocity, he says, "I f---ed up."

"DJ Strong caused an uproar and made Bishop look crazy and also gave mixtape DJs a bad rep," Whoo Kid said in a statement to Mixtape Monday. Whoo Kid is the official DJ helping Lamont drop the mixtape in the name of coastal unity.

"Your wife knows you're a bi---," Lamont said, addressing Strong. "It's DJ Thong. Right now, he's extra miserable. But thank you, 'cause you gave us extra publicity. Bless DJ Thong."

Strong released a statement in the aftermath. "Contrary to what my normal ethic is, in regards to my artists and my mixtapes, there has been a confusion about the latest mixtape's release, with great respect to all concerned. I apologize that this has gotten to such a point and that it has affected a lot of people. I am very sorry that this all happened, and in my excitement to make this project a big success, one miscommunicated mistake was made. A special apology goes out to Bishop Lamont. I would never do anything out of spite to hurt the very artists we've been wanting to see so successful out here on the West Coast for such a long time."

Bishop said he came up with the Confessional title because "I'm testifying in the booth. This is the last of the mixtapes before the album. Me and Whoo Kid got together. We been cool for a long time. I wanted to go all out for the fans."

Lamont's upcoming album, The Reformation, will now drop in October. He said the LP is just about done and features work from some of his favorite producers of all time: Quik, Lord Fines, Dr. Dre, Hi-Tek and a bunch of new guys.

"I've never felt so free and able to create what needs to be created — not only for myself, but for the world," Bishop said.

BL wouldn't say when exactly Dr. Dre's Detox LP is coming but promised that the Doc is putting in time on his grind. "He been working like crazy," Lamont said. "He's charged up. It's crazy. He's buffed for you. He's scuba diving for you. When have you seen Dre have this much fun? He's buffer now. So the 'hell yeahs' are deeper!"

Joints to Check For

"City Lights." "It mixes hip-hop and rock together," Lamont said. "It's just raw; it's bustin'. It has an energy to it. It makes hip-hop evolve again. It feels right. I feel like how Run-DMC did with the Aerosmith jump-off when they did ['Walk This Way'] over. I'm talking about the union to the Pearly Gates."

"Send a N---a Home." "It's just a fly record," Bishop said. "It goes back to that tongue-twister stuff, 'cause I love Big Pun so much. It's got elements of Lords of the Underground in it. It's just about bustin'. That Canibus sh--, where you're not thinking about bar structure, you're not thinking about concept. It just gives you that energy that makes you wanna crash your car or smack a [wack] DJ."

"The Greatest Trick." "My background comes from church, and my auntie's a minister," Lamont said. "I have to still touch the Gospel realm but make it so it can be accessible to kids and still speak the truth — speak about topics and social issues we're confronted with but not [push it]. It's a history lesson and deals with a lot of stuff."

Don't Sleep: Other Notable Selections This Week

» Clinton Sparks and Kardinal Offishall - Limited Time Only (Hosted by Akon)

» DJ Green Lantern and Charles Hamilton - Outside Looking

» DJ Nice and Legend - Joell Ortiz: Brooklyn Bomber

» DJ Whoo Kid and CNN - Back on That Q.U. Sh--

» DJ Woogie - Streets on Beats

'Hood's Heavy Rotation: Bubbling Below The Radar

» Fat Joe (featuring Lil Wayne and the Game) - "You Ain't Sayin' Nothin' " remix

» G-Unit - "Down"

» LL Cool J (featuring The-Dream) - "Baby"

» Mariah Carey (featuring Akon and Lil Wayne) - "Bye Bye" remix

» Soulja Boy (featuring Yung Joc) - "Donk" remix

Celebrity Faves

Bigger than Ringling Bros.! Get your top hat. 50 Cent admits that he was wrong about Shawty Lo. The G-Unit General initially wrote off L.O. and his D4L crew as one-hit wonders, but he changed his mind after hearing "Dey Know."

"I've had records that came out and they were hit radio records, and I didn't understand them," 50 told us. "I said D4L would probably never have another record after 'Laffy Taffy.' Shawty Lo proved me wrong. If you don't know nothing, you know 'Big up to all my haters!' That was exactly where it was supposed to be on that record. 'Bankhead been pullin' capers.' Those parts! I'm not from Bankhead. He makes me say, 'Bankhead, been pullin' capers.' It's done right. He may have made a million records to make that one record. And he may have to make a million more to get it again. I'm sure he's willing to do the work he has to do to get it in."

The Streets Is Talking: News & Notes From The Underground

Big ups to Big Boi for letting Andre 3000 rap. Dre has one of the best verses of the year on "Royal Flush." The record is still buzzin', cousin.

"[We] came in the studio, actually New Year's Day," Big remembered. "Came in the studio, his verse is maybe 190,000 bars, but I just told him to go for what he know. When people ask me, 'Why is Dre's verse so long?' Because he's bustin'! We was recording, I was like, 'OK, cool.' As long as it's not too long to play it and it gets broadcast, I was like, 'Let's run it.' "

Unfortunately, it doesn't look like we'll see a video for the song, which also features Raekwon the Chef. Outkast's schedules haven't been able to sync up because of Dre being in Japan working on his clothing label. Meanwhile, Big Boi is looking to launch a new single from his Sir Luscious Left Foot: The Son of Chico Dusty album.

"It's more extreme," Big said about the record. "All me. All the concepts. [For] Speakerboxxx/The Love Below, me and Dre kinda had to stew the pot together. This, I'm doing it all my way. Speakerboxxx was my official solo album. We packaged [our albums] together, but this one is the real-deal, standalone Sir Luscious Left Foot album.

Obviously, Big Boi's raps have remained incisive through the years, but his partner has gotten most of the shine. Andre 3000 even landed on our "Hottest MCs in the Game" list for the past two years. So does Daddy Fat Stacks think he's being slept on?

"I don't know if it's an underestimation," Big replied. "I just don't really put myself out there like that. I draw enough attention to myself when I step in the room. Lyrically and as being an artist, I have nothing to prove. Me and Dre have done everything there is to do. We've won the Super Bowl of music. Hip-hop artists won Album of the Year at the Grammys. After that, what can you do? All the rhymes are definitely vicious. Once people get the whole Big Boi album and put it under a microscope, they'll see." ...

If anybody knows about making people "Bow Down," it's Ice Cube. The West Coast legend said that is definitely not what Nas did in dropping the controversial title Nigger from his upcoming album.

"It's a business at the end of the day," Cube said on the set of his latest video. "A lot of people invest money in the record, and they want to sell it. If they can't put it on the shelves, it's hard to sell. I don't think he bowed down to pressure. I think he, more or less, had to look at the reality that if he called the record that, it would hold the record back more than if he didn't.

"We do this music for it to be heard," Cube continued. "Not for it to be sitting around somewhere and be this niche thing. I love Nas, because he's kind of like the East Coast version to what I do. He don't just do 'hood records. He tries to put some knowledge in it. His record is gonna be bangin'! I don't care what he calls it. It's still gonna be bangin'."

For other artists featured in Mixtape Monday, check out Mixtape Mondays Headlines.






See Also

Thursday 19 June 2008

David Cook Plays Ball with Kimberly Caldwell

Kimberly Caldwell, David CookLook who David Cook is taking out to the ballgame.

The American Idol winner caught a game at Dodger Stadium on Tuesday with season two contestant Kimberly Caldwell, who was singing the...


Wednesday 11 June 2008

Tribeca, Amazon to digitize rare films

Launching with 500 titles; 1,500 more within a few months





The Tribeca Film Institute is partnering with Amazon to launch Reframe, a Web site for rare film and video owners to digitally convert and sell their titles.


Launching Monday at ReframeCollection.org, the site will provide free digital copies of video and "at-cost" conversion of films to content owners, then rent or sell the digital download or DVD versions on a nonexclusive basis. Reframe will use Amazon's DVD on Demand service for physical copies and its Unbox service for digital downloads to rent or sell.


TFI CEO Brian Newman said the site will launch with 500 titles, and about 1,500 will be digitized within the next few months. Reframe's goal is to host 10,000 titles within the next year. Experimental works from such filmmakers as Sally Potter and Ken Jacobs, archival footage and other rare materials will be available via the site's search engine.


The nonprofit TFI and copyright holders will split the profit on digital download rentals and purchases (distributed in Windows Media Player format) evenly. DVD sales will operate under a tiered system, with 40% of $50 and under titles, 85% of $51-$200 titles and 90% of more than $200 titles going to rights holders. More expensive titles will be aimed at the educational market looking for classroom materials, though rentals in the $4 range, lasting anywhere from 36 hours-30 days, are accessible to all visitors. Buyers must have an Amazon account to make purchases.


Reframe collaborated with CreateSpace (creator of DVD on Demand technology) to develop the site. Major funding for the venture was provided by the John D. & Catherine T. MacArthur Foundation.


In the coming months, Newman said he hopes to add social networking elements to the site, which is in beta. The site is one of the first TFI initiatives since the organization absorbed fellow nonprofit Renew Media this year.



See Also

Friday 6 June 2008

Qtrax Implements Oracle(R) Infrastructure Software to Support Global Peer-to-Peer Music Service

Ad-supported Music Sharing Service Benefits from High Performance and
Scalability


REDWOOD SHORES, Calif., May 29 /PRNewswire-FirstCall/ --

-- Oracle today announced that Qtrax (Pink Sheets: BLLN.PK), a
free, legal peer-to-peer music service with an ad-supported delivery
model, has implemented Oracle(R) infrastructure software to provide the
highly reliable, scalable IT architecture necessary to deliver its
global service.
-- Qtrax's implementation includes Oracle Database, Oracle Real
Application Clusters, Oracle Enterprise Manager and components of
Oracle Fusion Middleware including Oracle Application Server and Oracle
Coherence. With this software now in place, Qtrax will have the
ability to support millions of concurrent users.
-- With the goal of becoming a significant global player in the music
download market, Qtrax will begin offering an escalating catalog in
June. Qtrax's ad-supported model directs revenue back to artists and
rights holders.
-- With Oracle, Qtrax plans to continue to scale its service
internationally. The company plans to expand its use of Oracle
Coherence, which delivers advanced in-memory data grid capabilities
that provide fast and reliable access to frequently used data.


Supporting Quotes

-- "Qtrax has designed an innovative business model, which monetizes the
demand for peer-to-peer music sharing, while providing users with a
free experience. Oracle delivers a reliable technology solution,
helping Qtrax ensure its systems are up and running to meet customer
needs," said David Sharpley, vice president, product marketing and
channels, Oracle Communications.
-- "Oracle is a key enabler to our service's success. With Oracle's
highly reliable, scalable software, we are equipped to grow our service
and lead the way in free, legal peer-to-peer music sharing. We look
forward to growing our relationship with Oracle and exploring its other
product offerings to further enhance performance and data analysis,"
said J. Christopher Roe, chief technology officer, Qtrax.


Supporting Resources

http://www.oracle.com/industries/media-entertainment/index.html

http://www.oracle.com/database/enterprise_edition.html

http://www.oracle.com/database/rac_home.html

http://www.oracle.com/appserver/index.html

http://www.oracle.com/epm

http://www.oracle.com/enterprise_manager/index.html

http://www.oracle.com/products/middleware/coherence/index.html

http://www.qtrax.com

About Oracle

Oracle (Nasdaq: ORCL) is the world's largest enterprise software
company. For more information about Oracle, please visit our Web site at
http://www.oracle.com.

Trademark

Oracle is a registered trademark of Oracle Corporation and/or its
affiliates. Other names may be trademarks of their respective owners.

(Logo: http://www.newscom.com/cgi-bin/prnh/20020718/ORCLLOGO)




See Also

Saturday 31 May 2008

Max Raabe

Max Raabe   
Artist: Max Raabe

   Genre(s): 
Pop
   



Discography:


Die Hits des Jahres   
 Die Hits des Jahres

   Year:    
Tracks: 14