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Alicia Keys cancels another concert

  • Apr. 25th, 2008 at 7:44 PM

 

CLEVELAND -- Alicia Keys has scrapped a concert in Cleveland after canceling her show in Pittsburgh earlier this week.

A message posted on her Web site says the 27-year-old R&B singer has swollen vocal cords. She was scheduled to perform Thursday night at Cleveland State University's Wolstein Center.

Keys plans to perform in Columbus on Saturday night.

Fans with tickets to the Cleveland show will have their tickets honored at Value City Arena in Columbus. They can also get a refund.

Keys isn't the only one on her tour with vocal problems. "American Idol" winner Jordin Sparks was one of the opening acts, but she's now under a doctor's care and resting her voice, probably until next month.

 

Have you pre-ordered your copy of Grand Theft Auto IV. yet?  If not, you may be missing out on a piece of history

Grand Theft Auto 4
The latest edition, which takes place in the concrete jungles of Liberty City, could fetch $400 million in the first week - at least according to pre-release predictions.  That includes a first-week estimate from publisher Take-Two Interactive, owner of Rockstar Games. 

The dollar figure translates into roughly 6 million copies, a potential first-week sales record for any game.  And GTA4 is threatening to generate the strongest first-week revenues for any entertainment release, ever. 

That means serious exposure for the artists slotted into the game, as well as retail partner Amazon MP3.  The soundtrack for the game remains under wraps, though players will have the ability to grab Amazon MP3s from a 150-song playlist.  Grand Theft Auto IV hits retailers April 29th.

 

According to information confirmed Thursday.  Inside and outside the building, the label announced that Davis would be shifting into a creative role, while Barry Weiss assumes top stripes at BMG.

Specifically, Weiss now becomes Chairman and CEO of the BMG Label Group, which encompasses RCA Records, Jive, J Records, LaFace, Arista, Volcano, Verity, GospoCentric and Fo Yo Soul.  Weiss was formerly President and CEO of the Zomba Label Group, and will continue to oversee Zomba within his current role. 

Barry will report to Rolf Schmidt-Holtz, Chief Executive Officer of Sony BMG Music Entertainment.  In a memo, Sony BMG praised Weiss as an "exceptional leader who skillfully combines creative sensitivity with business tenacity," alluding to a stronger reputation for cost control.    

Others within the group will be exiting.  That includes Chief Operating Officer Tim Bowen, and President and COO Charles Goldstuck, according to an announcement.  Richard Sanders, currently President of Global Marketing, will move to Head of International.

Alicia Keys clarifies stance on rap

  • Apr. 18th, 2008 at 3:56 PM
 
NEW YORK (AP) — Alicia Keys says she's not a conspiracy theorist. In a statement issued
 Tuesday, Keys said she was clarifying "comments that were made during my recent 
Blender magazine interview since they have been misrepresented."

According to an interview in the magazine's May issue, the 27-year-old singer says:
 "'Gangsta rap' was a ploy to convince black people to kill each other. 'Gangsta rap' didn't 
exist." She also is quoted as saying that she wears a gold AK-47 pendant around her neck
 "to symbolize strength, power and killing 'em dead."

"We stand by our story," Blender spokeswoman Kate Cafaro told The Associated Press 
on Tuesday.

"My comments about 'gangsta rap' were in no way trying to suggest that the government 
is responsible for creating this genre of rap music," Keys said in a statement issued by 
J Records. "The point that I was trying to make was that the term was oversloganized by
 some of the media causing reactions that were not always positive. Many of the 
'gangsta rap' lyrics articulate the problems of the artists' experiences and I think all of us,
 including our leaders, could be doing more to address these problems including drugs, 
gang violence, crime, and other related social issues."

As for the AK-47 remark, Keys said Tuesday that AK-47 is a nickname given to her by 
friends "as an acronym for Alicia Keys and a metaphor for wowing people with my music 
and performances, 'killing 'em dead' on stage. The reference was in no way meant to
 have a literal, political or negative connotation."

When AP attempted to reach Keys last week about the Blender interview, her publicist, 
Theola Borden, said the singer was on vacation and unavailable for comment.

The multiplatinum star behind the hits Fallin' and No One most recently had success 
with her latest CD, As I Am, which has sold 3.4 million copies, according to Nielsen 
Soundscan.

 
 
Smithson: Played it straight on Without You.
Fox
Smithson: Played it straight on Without You.
Singing Mariah Carey songs is a thankless
 task, especially trying 
to duplicate all the trills and chills of her 
virtuosic vocal performances.

Yet the seven remaining Idol contestants 
rose to the challenge. 
David Cook superbly transformed 
Always Be My Baby into a 
grunge ballad, while Jason Castro 
converted I Don't Wanna Cry
 into a lulling "luau" (as judge Randy 
Jackson put it) ballad. 
Brooke White was a little less successful 
in turning Hero 
into a singer/songwriter plaint, good idea
 though it was.

 

The other singers were more 
conventional in their approaches, 
but wisely avoided oversinging or, for the most part, attempting 
Mariah-like vocal feats beyond their abilities. Kristy Lee Cook's 
skillfully restrained Forever may have been her best of the season.

Routine belting from David Archuleta (When You Believe), 
Carly Smithson (Without You) and Syesha Mercado, whose 
Vanishing was regrettably mannered, paled by comparison. 
But it was a surprising victory for the Idols, and you have to call the win …
 Mariah.

Jay Z, Live Nation strike $150-million deal

  • Apr. 12th, 2008 at 2:41 PM
 Remember a few months ago when there were rumors about Jay-Z looking for a $100 million contract to start a new label, and many in the music industry snickered at the possibility of anyone paying that?

So-called "experts" were talking about how Jay, 38, was too old to command such a price, pointing out how his recent "American Gangster" album only went platinum, despite being critically acclaimed. They crowed that the days of the massive music contracts were over, because struggling music sales mean that artists can't command those prices any more. They jeered that such demands from Jay were 10 years too late, both for him and the industry.

Well, who's laughing now, chumps?

Word leaked out earlier this month that Hova will get $150 million from Live Nation for a 10-year partnership for all of his music-related businesses and possibly a piece of other new ventures. The deal reportedly includes a $10 million advance for each of his next three albums after he fulfills his Def Jam contract with a new album, expected late this year. It also may include up to $50 million in seed money for him to launch a new label, where he can groom the next Rihanna and Kanye West as he did for Def Jam.

Jay-Z's Live Nation labelmates are no slouches, either. There's Madonna, who landed $120 million for a 10-year deal for her music-related businesses after the release of her "Hard Candy" album on Warner Bros. later this month. And U2 has signed with the company in a reported $100 million deal for a 10-year partnership for all their music-related businesses except for their album releases, which will still be handled by Interscope.

So has Live Nation grossly overpaid for these artists because none of them would have been able to extract similar sums from any major label? Perhaps, though, when you add in all the touring and merchandising revenue that Madonna and U2 generate, it doesn't seem nearly as crazy, especially since it most likely locks all three artists into the new ticketing company it will launch next year to take on Ticketmaster.

And whatever shortfall, if any, that comes from these deals - and the dozens of others that are sure to follow - Live Nation may make up for it by showing how anemic and flat-footed the music industry is these days.

At this point, why would any veteran artist sign with a major label when Live Nation is throwing around this kind of money? If an artist doesn't like the Live Nation model of partnerships, they could simply build their own model the way Radiohead and Nine Inch Nails have.

Major labels have been saying for years now that the 360-

degree deal, where the company partners with artists for a share of revenue from all their music-related businesses, was the wave of the future. It turns out they may be right, but they didn't really do anything about it.

If they wanted to sign their veteran artists for 360-degree deals, they would have to be able to compete with Live Nation on the concert-promotion front and the merchandising front. But where are the labels' powerful new concert-promotion divisions? Where are their new powerhouse merchandising arms? Oh, right, they don't have any.

They were counting on companies like Live Nation to partner with them because they were so big and powerful. Instead, Live Nation turned around and invested in new companies and big-name executives and artists to beat the labels at their own game. It's similar to how Apple ended up taking the sale of music on the Internet away from the music industry.

That was an uppercut the music industry still hasn't recovered from. What Live Nation and its flurry of deals may deliver is the knockout blow for the current major-label model.

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TODAYS MUSIC NEWS

  • Apr. 12th, 2008 at 2:29 PM

LOS ANGELES - After 26 years of sobriety, Alice Cooper has some advice to pass along to the younger generation: "I don't think you need to die for your art."

The shock-rocker will be honored for his work with fellow addicts during a May 9 benefit dinner and concert in Hollywood organized by the MusiCares MAP Fund, which provides members of the music community access to addiction recovery treatment.

"I've made myself very available to friends of mine," says Cooper, who will receive the Stevie Ray Vaughan Award. "They're people who would call me late at night and say, 'Between you and me, I've got a problem."'

MusiCares will also honor Velvet Revolver guitarist Slash for his dedication to the organization's mission and goals.

Cooper and Slash will perform at the alcohol-free event, at the Music Box at the Fonda theater, as will Cat Power, Blind Melon and all-star group Camp Freddy.

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