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Love Florence Welch and Dua Lipa? Mayssa Karaa Releases New Video for “Versailles”

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Mayssa Karaa has launched a new music video for “Versailles” — the feature single off her ten-track debut album Simple Cure, available now!

Produced by GRAMMY Award-winning producer Rich Jacques, the album builds from the recent success enjoyed from her hit songs “White Rabbit,” (featured on the GRAMMY Award-nominated soundtrack of the Academy Award-nominated film, “American Hustle”), and “Hayati,” her #1 hit on Apple Music India, in collaboration with Academy Award-winning producer AR Rahman.

Many would argue the best types of music combine the familiar and the new, and Mayssa Karaa has these qualities shining brightly from her work. Having recently released a series of singles, each one drawing more interest than the next, Karaa has earned praise for her hypnotic vocal delivery, distinctive style and performance in the supporting videos, and — maybe most of all — her introspective yet explorative lyrics.

“My album tells a story with each song playing its part,” commented the clearly passionate singer reflecting on her own journey to where she is today. “I think it’s one many can relate to today.

“This is for those who left their homes, looking for the exciting unknown, perhaps something better. It’s for those who dared break out from their own shackles and explore the world on their own terms, while also embracing who they really are, and who they want to be. Time had taught me the cure isn’t outside of us: the simple cure is you!

“This is a musical journey of empowerment and self-acceptance.”

Reviewers have compared Karaa’s sound to Florence Welch and Dua Lipa, without forgetting her Lebanse roots and subtle political prowess, but never in a way that rejects who or where she is today.

Simple Cure brings the listener through a journey of experiences seen from Karaa’s eyes; “Call me a Stranger” searches for her own identity, while “In the Grey” delivers the lesson that ‘life is almost never black and white.’

“Versailles,” which leaves one wondering if its lyrics address the place, the personal, or even the idea of making a “truce” in both the external and internal worlds, concludes with its most important, liberating message.

With the music video for “Versailles,” Karaa shows just what dance music can be in the modern age. Without trying to rebrand the genre or force styles together, she takes age-old elements that are the DNA of dance, pop, R&B and soul — infectiousness, groove and easy accessibility — and mixes less tangible elements such as charm, charisma, passion and stylish grace to effortlessly forge them into something both recognisable, but also cutting edge, modern, and forward thinking.

Throw in a whole slice of arabesque exoticism, sultry pop moves, and a beguiling video and you have an exhilarating mix.

“Versailles” is an analogy — a heady and hedonistic dream world, though inspired by the opulence and grandeur of the palace of the same name, is more a metaphor for embracing life, embracing diversity and one another, no matter where we come from or where we are going.

More than that, it is about finding freedom and happiness and allowing others to do the same.

Musically, Simple Cure can be thought of as a response to the modern world that says, “I will take what works for me and I enjoy but my traditions will never leave me, and the two of you together will make something new.” It showcases artistic diversity with songs that range from piano-based simplicity to epic electronic orchestration, all with a timeless middle eastern influence that takes into modern pop global and creates something uniquely her own.

Tracklist
1. Broken Lines
2. In the Grey
3. Simple Cure
4. Versailles (Remix)
5. Got That Feeling
6. Somebody to Love
7. I’ll Let Go If You Let Go
8. Never Go Back
9. Call Me a Stranger
10. Versailles

The Highwomen Cover “The Chain” in Howard Stern’s Studio

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Brandi Carlile, Maren Morris, Amanda Shires, and Natalie Hemby perform their cover of Fleetwood Mac’s hit song in the Stern Show studio.

The Beatles’ Abbey Road 50th Anniversary Special Releases Coming September 27

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It was 50 years ago today, on August 8, 1969, that the world’s most famous band stepped out from London’s EMI Recording Studios to stride, single-file, across the black and white stripes of Abbey Road’s nearby zebra crossing. With photographer Iain Macmillan balanced on a stepladder and one policeman stopping the street’s light traffic, The Beatles crossed back and forth three times, led by John Lennon, followed by Ringo Starr, Paul McCartney, and George Harrison. Just six photos were taken, with the fifth selected as the cover shot for The Beatles’ penultimate studio album, Abbey Road, named after the tree-lined street in which the studios are located.

Released September 26, 1969, Abbey Road was not The Beatles’ final album, as Let It Be followed in 1970, but it was the last one John, Paul, George, and Ringo recorded together as a band. The Beatles will celebrate Abbey Road’s anniversary with a suite of beautifully presented packages to be released worldwide on September 27 by Apple Corps Ltd./Capitol/UMe. Now available for preorder, the album’s 17 tracks are newly mixed by producer Giles Martin and mix engineer Sam Okell in stereo, high res stereo, 5.1 surround, and Dolby Atmos, accompanied by 23 session recordings and demos, most of which are previously unreleased.

There will also be a Super deluxe 4 disc set, 3 LP deluxe vinyl, 2 CD deluxe, limited edition picture disc, CD, LP, and available on digital and streaming on September 27, 2019.

SUPER DELUXE [3CD+1Blu-ray set; digital audio collection]

CD ONE: 2019 Stereo Mix
1. Come Together
2. Something
3. Maxwell’s Silver Hammer
4. Oh! Darling
5. Octopus’s Garden
6. I Want You (She’s So Heavy)
7. Here Comes The Sun
8. Because
9. You Never Give Me Your Money
10. Sun King
11. Mean Mr Mustard
12. Polythene Pam
13. She Came In Through The Bathroom Window
14. Golden Slumbers
15. Carry That Weight
16. The End
17. Her Majesty

CD TWO: Sessions
1. I Want You (She’s So Heavy) (Trident Recording Session & Reduction Mix)
2. Goodbye (Home Demo)
3. Something (Studio Demo)
4. The Ballad Of John And Yoko (Take 7)
5. Old Brown Shoe (Take 2)
6. Oh! Darling (Take 4)
7. Octopus’s Garden (Take 9)
8. You Never Give Me Your Money (Take 36)
9. Her Majesty (Takes 1–3)
10. Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight (Takes 1–3 / Medley)
11. Here Comes The Sun (Take 9)
12. Maxwell’s Silver Hammer (Take 12)

CD THREE: Sessions
1. Come Together (Take 5)
2. The End (Take 3)
3. Come And Get It (Studio Demo)
4. Sun King (Take 20)
5. Mean Mr Mustard (Take 20)
6. Polythene Pam (Take 27)
7. She Came In Through  The Bathroom Window (Take 27)
8. Because (Take 1 – Instrumental)
9. The Long One (Trial Edit & Mix – 30 July 1969)
(Medley: You Never Give Me Your Money, Sun King, Mean Mr Mustard, Her Majesty, Polythene Pam, She Came In Through The Bathroom Window, Golden Slumbers, Carry That Weight, The End)
10. Something (Take 39 – Instrumental – Strings Only)
11. Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight (Take 17 – Instrumental – Strings & Brass Only)

BLU-RAY: Abbey Road

Audio Features:
– Dolby Atmos
– 96kHz/24 bit DTS-HD Master Audio 5.1
– 96kHz/24 bit High Res Stereo (2019 Stereo Mix)

DELUXE 3LP VINYL BOX SET (limited edition)

LP ONE: Side 1 (2019 Stereo Mix)
1. Come Together
2. Something
3. Maxwell’s Silver Hammer
4. Oh! Darling
5. Octopus’s Garden
6. I Want You (She’s So Heavy)

LP ONE: Side 2 (2019 Stereo Mix)
1. Here Comes The Sun
2. Because
3. You Never Give Me Your Money
4. Sun King
5. Mean Mr Mustard
6. Polythene Pam
7. She Came In Through The Bathroom Window
8. Golden Slumbers
9. Carry That Weight
10. The End
11. Her Majesty

LP TWO: Side 1 (Sessions)
1. I Want You (She’s So Heavy) (Trident Recording Session and Reduction Mix)
2. Goodbye (Home Demo)
3. Something (Studio Demo)
4. The Ballad Of John And Yoko (Take 7)
5. Old Brown Shoe (Take 2)

LP TWO: Side 2 (Sessions)
1. Oh! Darling (Take 4)
2. Octopus’s Garden (Take 9)
3. You Never Give Me Your Money (Take 36)
4. Her Majesty (Takes 1–3)
5. Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight (Takes 1–3) / Medley)
6. Here Comes The Sun (Take 9)
7. Maxwell’s Silver Hammer (Take 12)

LP THREE: Side 1 (Sessions)
1. Come Together (Take 5)
2. The End (Take 3)
3. Come and Get It (Studio Demo)
4. Sun King (Take 20)
5. Mean Mr Mustard (Take 20)
6. Polythene Pam (Take 27)
7. She Came In Through The Bathroom Window (Take 27)
8. Because (Take 1 Instrumental)

LP THREE: Side 2 (Sessions)
1. The Long One (Trial Edit & Mix – 30 July 1969)
2. Something (Take 39 – Instrumental – Strings Only)
3. Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight (Take 17 – Instrumental – Strings & Brass Only)

DELUXE 2CD
CD ONE: 2019 Stereo Mix
CD TWO: Sessions
1. Come Together (Take 5)
2. Something (Studio Demo)
3. Maxwell’s Silver Hammer (Take 12)
4. Oh! Darling (Take 4)
5. Octopus’s Garden (Take 9)
6. I Want You (She’s So Heavy) (Trident Recording Session & Reduction Mix)
7. Here Comes The Sun (Take 9)
8. Because (Take 1 Instrumental)
9. You Never Give Me Your Money (Take 36)
10. Sun King (Take 20)
11. Mean Mr Mustard (Take 20)
12. Polythene Pam (Take 27)
13. She Came In Through The Bathroom Window (Take 27)
14. Golden Slumbers/Carry That Weight (Takes 1–3 / Medley)
15. The End (Take 3)
16. Her Majesty (Takes 1–3)

STANDARD [1CD; digital; 1LP vinyl; limited edition 1LP picture disc vinyl]
2019 Stereo Mix

Photo Gallery: Nelly with TLC and Flo Rida at Toronto’s Budweiser Stage

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All photos by Mini’s Memories. You can contact her at minismemories@hotmail.com

Nelly
Nelly
Nelly
Nelly
Nelly
Nelly
Nelly
Nelly
TLC
TLC
TLC
TLC
TLC
TLC
Flo Rida
Flo Rida
Flo Rida
Flo Rida
Flo Rida
Flo Rida

The Extraordinary Gifts of the Stars

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Stars have been given some extraordinary gifts by their partners, acquaintances and friends. Elizabeth Taylor amassed a wide range of jewellery throughout her eight marriages, including a 38-carat diamond. Yet some gifts are extraordinary in ways more peculiar, like the novelty mini-fridge gifted to Elton John one year.  Here are those stories and more:

Jack Nicholson and Angelica Houston

Twenty years of both good and bad times for this couple, with a first date cancelled by Nicholson so he could meet with a former partner instead. That should have been warning enough. The final nail in the coffin was in 1989 when Nicholson announced he was going to be a father with another woman, Rebecca Broussard, who had two children with Nicholson. After giving Jack a beating, Angelica got on with her life. For Christmas that year, Huston received a pearl and diamond bracelet which had once been a gift from Frank Sinatra to Ava Gardner. It was Jack’s way to conclude their relationship.

Alice Cooper

Alice Cooper, rock and roll star, film actor, a golfing celebrity, restaurateur and a popular radio DJ is surprisingly a mild-mannered, softly spoken man. Having had issues around drugs and alcohol, he found that golf saved his sanity, a story he related in his book Golf Monster: My 12 Steps to Becoming a Golf Addict. Those close to him know just how important golf is to him. In 2015, he was presented with a gift usually seen by those looking through an anniversary gifts guide. He was presented with an Eternity Rose gold dipped golf ball and tee set by Rebel FM, during his Australian tour.

Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie

What do you buy the man who has everything? In 2011, Angelina Jolie bought him land rights to his very own waterfall for his 48th birthday. As someone who loves architecture and taking inspiration from a visit the couple made to Frank Lloyd Wright’s famous Fallingwater estate in rural Pennsylvania, she wanted to give him the opportunity to build his very own secluded hideaway directly on top of the waterfall. The concept was to be sustainability, pulling together all aspects of nature, light, glass.

Elvis and Gladys Presley

In 1955, Elvis Presley bought his first Cadillac, which was pink. He had to replace it the same year after an accident and resprayed the new model pink to match his first. After the respray was completed, Elvis gave the car as a gift to his mother, Gladys. A generous gift except, for one thing, Gladys never had a driving licence. However, she still liked people to know it was her car, even if her son would still use it to transport his band.

Rod Stewart and Elton John

Friends since the 1960s, the friends exchanged presents each Christmas. One year it went spectacularly wrong for Stewart. Considering a gift for a man who has everything, Stewart hit on the idea of a novelty portable fridge in which the door opens at a touch of a button, and a bottle rises out in a cloud of vapour. Elton’s present to him that same year was a drawing by Rembrandt. Elton’s later wedding gift to Stewart was a £10 superstore voucher for “something nice for the house”.

Richard Burton and Elizabeth Taylor

Married in 1964, Burton bought his wife Elizabeth Taylor a 68-carat diamond ring five years later, for which he paid $1.1 million, outbidding the Sultan of Brunei and world-famous jeweller Harry Winston. While the diamond made a fabulous necklace for Taylor, the million-dollar insurance policy only allowed her to wear the diamond for 30 days each year and in public only under armed guard.

Robert Downey Jr. and Jamie Foxx

In 2010, after Robert Downey Jr. acquired a ranch in Malibu after his friend Jami Foxx went to visit the family there, he surprised him with a pair of horses for his 45th birthday as he had seen that the stables were empty. It was only later that Downey admitted that he was terrified of horses but appreciated the gesture and in return gifted his Vintage El Camino, the one from the Iron Man movie, to Foxx.

 

A Beginners Guide to Ukulele Sizes

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Over the last few years, the ukulele has seen a dramatic rise in popularity. From viral videos of ukulele covers, to them appearing on-stage alongside your favourite artists, ukuleles are everywhere on the modern music scene.

Traditionally, ukuleles have been available in four different sizes: increasing in size from soprano, through concert and tenor, to baritone. The latest addition to the ukulele family is the bass ukulele, which has many of the attributes of the bass guitar but the size and portability offered by ukuleles.

Whether you’re thinking about buying your first ukulele, looking for an upgrade on your current one, or had no idea to start with that there were multiple sizes and styles available, this article has got you covered. Here we take a look a look at the most common sizes, their characteristics, and their unique sounds.

Soprano

The soprano ukulele is probably what you’re thinking of when you try to picture a ukulele. It is the most commonly used of all the sizes – and it is also the smallest. For this reason, it has the tightest fret spacing and the shortest neck of all the ukulele sizes. It is the perfect starter instrument, with the classic ukulele sound and standard tuning (G/C/E/A).

Concert

The next size up is the concert ukulele. In many ways it is similar to the soprano, but has a slightly thicker and longer neck, making it better for people with larger hands. Concert models have more frets than the soprano, and the bigger size gives it more depth in sound. The same standard tuning as the soprano ukulele applies (G/C/E/A).

Tenor

The tenor ukulele has a sound more akin to a classical guitar, and is deeper and richer than the soprano and concert ukuleles. It is bigger than the concert, and therefore has better sound projection. You can produce a wider range of notes on a tenor – making it a top choice for professional musicians. The tenor is also excellent for fingerpicking, as the frets are more widely spaced than the concert or soprano alternatives. G/C/E/A tuning is also applicable for tenors.

 

Baritone

In terms of size, the baritone is the next step up from the tenor ukulele. It has a wider and longer neck, and produces a deeper sound. If you are already familiar with playing the acoustic guitar, the baritone is a great choice. It has a similar sound, and is bigger in size to aid fingerpicking. The tuning for a baritone ukulele is different to the smaller sizes, and requires the same as the tuning for the four highest guitar strings (D/G/B/E).

Bass

The bass ukulele is the new kid on the block when it come to the growing market for ukuleles, bringing the best aspects of the ukulele in line with the best aspects of the bass guitar. It is slightly bigger than that baritone in size, and the tuning differs in that it is exactly the same as the tuning for a bass guitar.

Another key difference is that the strings are completely different to this found on any other instrument, made of a synthetic rubber-like material. These strings are used to give it the deep, low sound characteristic of bass instruments. Most bass ukuleles come with a pre-installed pickup for sound amplification, as volume can be an issue without amplification.

As you can see, the are a number of options out there! Many beginners choose to start with the ever-popular soprano, while others are drawn in by the new and exciting world of bass ukulele options. Or, perhaps you are an experienced guitarist looking to broaden your instrument collection, making the tenor or baritone an excellent choice. In any case, have a look around and see what excites you – the size right for you completely depends on what you are looking for!

If you grew up with the Miracle Mets, Astroturf, ’75 Topps, Kelly Leak, the Crazy Crab, and the Bash Brothers, here’s your next gift to yourself.

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If you grew up with the Miracle Mets, Astroturf, ’75 Topps, Kelly Leak, the Crazy Crab, and the Bash Brothers, here’s your next gift to yourself. Toymaker Super7 presents a series of retro-style action figures inspired by major league baseball players, including greats like Willie Mays, Ted Williams, Jackie Robinson, Joe Dimaggio, Yogi Berra, the Phillie Phanatic, and more.

Teenager Launches Frisbee Trick Shots You Won’t Believe What You’re Seeing

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Madison Swaney is perfect on these impossible hole-in-one frisbee throws over houses and other obstacles.

The Greatest Las Vegas Concerts Of All Time

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The great American centre of entertainment that is Las Vegas, Nevada, has long been closely tied to the music business. Over the decades, the city in the desert has played host to a number of legendary concerts that have since gone down in history.

From everybody’s favourite crooner to genre-defining British rock bands, all of the biggest acts have played in Vegas at one time or another. Truth is, Las Vegas and great music go together perfectly; so much so in fact that many famous songs are based on the city and its notoriously vibrant culture.

In this article, we will take a look at a selection of the finest concerts ever to have been played in Sin City. Although every night of the week sees some huge names playing Vegas’ best and biggest venues, the concerts listed here are the true generation-defining nights that have gone down in Las Vegas folklore.

So, without further ado, here is our list of the greatest Las Vegas concerts of all time…

The Beatles – 1964

On their first ever US tour, the fab four came to Las Vegas to play a series of sold-out shows at the famous Convention Center Rotunda. Today these 25 minute long shows are best remembered as some of the noisiest gigs of all time, back when PA systems couldn’t compete with over 8,000 adoring fans singing along to every single word of the band’s smash hit early singles releases. These days these famous shows are truly a part of Nevada’s musical history and perhaps set the scene for Las Vegas going on to become one of the foremost musical venues on the planet.

Elvis Presley – 1969

By this point The Pelvis was thirty six years old rather than the boyishly handsome nineteen year old that America had grown to love in the mid-1950s. In fact, this four-week run of shows at the end of the sixties was something of a comeback for Elvis who had fallen out of favour during the decade when less clean-cut rock was beginning transform music and, for that matter, America. It would not be too audacious to suggest that Elvis may not be seen with the same legendary status that he is today if it had not been for this 1969 run of shows. As it happens, he managed to completely nail every song he performed, with classics such as Hound Dog and Jail House Rock delighting audiences at the International Hotel every single night.

Prince – 1997

Back at the beginning of the end of the nineties, Prince was playing a series of sell-out shows at the MGM Grand. Although undoubtedly amazing performances from His Purple Majesty (as fans lovingly knew him), these shows would go on to be upstaged by a famous after-party performance by the legendary funk star. Taking place at Vegas’ Club Utopia, these raw, unrehearsed and thoroughly off the cuff after-party performances would soon become the stuff of legend as the late great artist would perform for many hours, often taking requests from the adoring audience of just a few dozen lucky attendees.

The Doors – 1969

These days Jim Morrison’s performance at the Las Vegas Ice Palace at the turn of the decade is the stuff of Nevada folklore; at the time though, it was met with severe skepticism. This is because Morrison was famously subdued during the whole forty five minute show, a tongue in cheek response to threats from the local governor to arrest Morrison if he was to behave in his, by that point, trademark lewd manner. In perhaps the least provocative performance of his entire career, The Doors’ frontman barely moved during the whole set and, in doing so, managed to provide more of a commentary on the state of free expression in 1960s USA than any hip-gyration or nakedness could ever have done.