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Kelly Clarkson on Artists Using Their Voice For Good

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“I don’t want to be trained to talk. I’m not a puppet, I have a brain. It’s weird, but I actually came with a brain, not just vocal cords, and it would be silly to not have an opinion. It would be a disgrace if I didn’t have an opinion. It would be a cruel irony to all these people who live in different countries who don’t have an opinion, and don’t count, for me not to take full advantage of all the opportunities that are laid before us here in this nation. I don’t want to hide the fact that I am successful, strong-minded, opinionated. Sometimes I get it wrong, but I learn — but I have a voice.”
– Kelly Clarkson, in New York Times

Gary Oldman Doesn’t Like His Acting In “Sid & Nancy”

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Gary Oldman initially turned down the lead in Sid and Nancy, the punk movement having passed him by without making much of a mark. “I just thought it was a lot of noise, so I was concerned who would see Sid and Nancy? Who cares?” he says of the role that put him on the map. “But I rolled up my sleeves, studied the way I’ve always done. You immerse yourself. I lost a ton of weight and made myself very ill.” To this day, it is not one of his favorites. “I don’t think I’m very good in it,” he says.

Via

Watch David Bowie, David Gilmour & Richard Wright Perform Pink Floyd’s “Arnold Layne”

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Arnold Layne, the debut single released by Pink Floyd in 1967, gets a bit of a resurgence thanks to this wonderful clip from the DVD set David Gilmour: Remember That Night – Live at the Royal Albert Hall, featuring the late David Bowie on vocals and Richard Wright on keyboards.

If You Loved The DJ Set On Paul McCartney’s One On One Tour, Here’s The Video

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Chris Holmes has spent over eight years touring the planet with Sir Paul McCartney as his show opening DJ. Videos from his recent DJ sets for McCartney One on One Tour use Mettle Mantra VR in Premiere Pro for stylization and effects. He captures the events with the Insta360 One camera, and used Mantra VR to quickly and easily stylize the 360 footage.

I caught the tour (finally, the first time I got to see him), knowing pretty much what songs were going to be spun. It was still AMAZING. For your enjoyment, here are 3 DJ set from Chris.

Chris Holmes’ opening DJ set for Paul McCartney’s One on One tour, October 1, 2017 at Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena
1) “Early Days” DJ Chris remix Paul McCartney
2) “Mamunia” DJ Chris remix Paul McCartney and Wings
2) “Check My Machine” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
4) “Mother Nature’s Son” DJ Chris mix The Beatles
5) “Blackbird” DJ Chris Parallel remix Blood Sisters/Billy Preston
6) “Dance Tonight” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
7) “Waterspout” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
8) “Country Dreamer” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
9) “Why Don’t We Do It In The Road” DJ Chris mix The Beatles
10) “Uncle Albert/Hands Across The Water” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
11) “You Know My Name (Look Up The Number)” DJ Chris mix The Beatles
12) “Get Back” DJ Chris mix Deidre Wilson Tabac
13) “Seaside Woman” DJ Chris mix Linda McCartney
14) “We Can Work It Out” DJ Chris motown mix Stevie Wonder
15) “Help” DJ Chris motown mix David Porter
16) “Too Many People” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
17) “Ram” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney

Chris Holmes’ opening DJ set for Paul McCartney’s One on One tour, October 2, 2017 at Detroit’s Little Caesars Arena
1)“Sun King/Beatlemania edit” DJ Chris mix The Beatles
2)“She Came In Through The Bathroom Window” DJ Chris mix Joe Cocker
3)“I’m Down” DJ Chris mix
4)“Run Devil Run” DJ Chris mix Wanda Jackson
5)“Come Together” DJ Chris parallel remix Various Artists
6)“Lucy In The Sky With Diamonds” DJ Chris mix The Beatles
7)“Way To Work” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
8)“Get Back” DJ Chris mix Deidre Wilson Tabac
9)“Hey Bulldog” DJ Chris edit of Erol Alkan mix The Beatles
10)“Flaming Pie” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
11)“Ou Est Le Soleil?” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
12)“Silly Little Love Songs (demo)” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
13)“Smile Away” DJ Chris fuzz mix Paul McCartney
14)“My Brave Face” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney/Elvis Costello
15)“A Love For You (demo)” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
16)“Take It Away” DJ Chris mix Paul McCartney
17)“Dizzy Miss Lizzy” DJ Chris mix The Beatles
18)“You Don’t Know How It Feels” DJ Chris edit Tom Petty and the Heartbreakers

Chris Holmes’ DJ set for Paul McCartney’s One on One tour at Desert Trip weekend 2 in Indio, California on October 15, 2016.
Desert Trip Weekend 2 Oct 15, 2016 Coachella Indio, California
1)“Sgt. Pepper’s Reprise” DJ Chris edit The Beatles
2)“Say Say Say” DJ Chris More Paul mix Paul McCartney and Michael Jackson
3)“Revolution” DJ Chris edit The Beatles
4)“Don’t Say Goodnight” DJ Chris edit Wings
5)“I Want To Hold Your Hand” DJ Chris edit Al Green
6)“It’s Getting Better” DJ Chris edit The Beatles
7)“Here Comes The Sun” DJ Chris edit Charles Wright
8)“Twist And Shout” diplo remix The Beatles
9)“Temporary Secretary” DJ Chris edit Paul McCartney
10)“You Can’t Do That” DJ Chris edit The Supremes
11)“Tomorrow Never Knows” DJ Chris edit The Beatles
12)“Paperback Writer” DJ Chris edit R.B. Greaves
13)“Dizzy Miss Lizzy” DJ Chris edit The Beatles

Watch A-ha Perform An Acoustic Version Of “Take On Me” And It’s GREAT

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Norwegian band A-ha performs a scaled-down and acoustic version of their 1985 pop hit Take on Me, taken from their album and video MTV Unplugged Summer Solstice.

Photo Gallery: Asking Alexandria with Blessthefall at Niagara Falls’ Rapids Theatre

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

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Cool Read This Weekend: “Just Around Midnight: Rock and Roll and the Racial Imagination

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By the time Jimi Hendrix died in 1970, the idea of a black man playing lead guitar in a rock band seemed exotic. Yet a mere ten years earlier, Chuck Berry and Bo Diddley had stood among the most influential rock and roll performers. Why did rock and roll become “white”? Just Around Midnight reveals the interplay of popular music and racial thought that was responsible for this shift within the music industry and in the minds of fans.

Rooted in rhythm-and-blues pioneered by black musicians, 1950s rock and roll was racially inclusive and attracted listeners and performers across the color line. In the 1960s, however, rock and roll gave way to rock: a new musical ideal regarded as more serious, more artistic—and the province of white musicians. Decoding the racial discourses that have distorted standard histories of rock music, Jack Hamilton underscores how ideas of “authenticity” have blinded us to rock’s inextricably interracial artistic enterprise.

According to the standard storyline, the authentic white musician was guided by an individual creative vision, whereas black musicians were deemed authentic only when they stayed true to black tradition. Serious rock became white because only white musicians could be original without being accused of betraying their race. Juxtaposing Sam Cooke and Bob Dylan, Aretha Franklin and Janis Joplin, Jimi Hendrix and the Rolling Stones, and many others, Hamilton challenges the racial categories that oversimplified the sixties revolution and provides a deeper appreciation of the twists and turns that kept the music alive.

Get it here.

David Bowie’s awkward and quite hilarious friendship with Roger Moore

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David Bowie befriended Roger Moore in the late Seventies – but ended up hiding from the Bond star after his daily visits became too annoying, according to the author of a new book about the singer.

Dylan Jones, author of David Bowie: A Life, first heard about the stars’ unlikely friendship from Oscar-nominated scriptwriter and novelist Hanif Kureishi.

“One of the weirdest people to be in Bowie’s orbit was Roger Moore,” said Jones on Tuesday, speaking to Telegraph rock critic Neil McCormick at a launch event for the book. “Kureishi told me this story, that when David Bowie moved to Switzerland at the end of the Seventies to escape tax and drug dealers, he didn’t know anybody there. He was in this huge house on the outskirts of Geneva – he knew nobody.

“One day, about half past five in the afternoon, there’s a knock on the door, and there he was: ‘Hello, David.’ Roger Moore comes in, and they had a cup of tea. He stays for drinks, and then dinner, and tells lots of stories about the James Bond films. They had a fantastic time – a brilliant night.

“But then, the next day, at 5.30… Knock, knock, it’s Roger Moore. He invites himself in again, and sits down: ‘Yeah, I’ll have a gin and tonic, David.’ He tells the same stories – but they’re slightly less entertaining the second time around.

“After two weeks [of Moore turning up] at 5.25pm – literally every day – David Bowie could be found underneath the kitchen table pretending not to be in.”

Via

Watch Courtney Barnett Perform “Nameless, Faceless” on Jimmy Fallon

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Musical guest Courtney Barnett performs “Nameless, Faceless” for the Tonight Show audience. Barnett’s Tell Me How You Really Feel is out now, and it’s great.

https://youtu.be/iQVvSdymxmQ

Kickstarter Names Perfect Pussy’s Meredith Graves New Director Of Music

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Meredith Graves joins Kickstarter as their Director of Music starting today. Meredith embodies a spirit of creative independence at the core of Kickstarter. She’s a talented writer who explores music, language, and identity for publications including PitchforkSSENSE, and i-D. She’s the founder and frontwoman behind the hardcore punk band Perfect Pussy. She established the independent record label and book publisher Honor Press. And most recently she was an anchor and journalist for MTV News, where she discussed rank-choice voting and Album Generic Flipper with Krist Novoselic, freestyled with Migos, and accidentally became a meme after a particularly Chance encounter with Beyoncé.

People have funded more music projects than any other category on Kickstarter — 27,488 albums, performances, independent venues, archival re-releases, and experimental events that span genres and geographies. This is a pretty great move, and watch for Kickstarter and Meredith support fellow creators who will build on that. In her own words:

Every day, all over the world, brilliant shit isn’t getting made because nobody has the money.

That which is not appropriately supported, historically, falls. Structures both concrete and theoretical rely on institutional backing as a form of loaned power. A band, a social initiative, an ideology, a house: not one can get off the ground without a strong foundation. One person’s success does not mean your failure — but this being true doesn’t make it fair that ten or fifteen major label artists receive a disproportionate amount of the money and resources available to the industry.

We the artists have, for too long, been on the wrong side of that divide. A lack of resources, perceived or actual, is the first and largest stumbling block most people encounter on their journey to rock-and-roll enlightenment. We know deep down in our bones that we could open that all-ages show space or community studio, record that life-changing anthem, compile and exhibit the whole histories of regional scenes — if only we had the money, time, support, resources. We lose sleep over internal conflicts like this, sleep we need in between band practices and dishwashing shifts, tired already but unwilling to close our eyes against the possibility of someday —

— all because music matters.

The most powerful institutions in the world are proposing more direct threats than ever toward our ability to speak and create freely. This honestly feels dangerous: the world is being deprived of the brilliance of billions, art that could theoretically affect future generations in the same way we stay fixed on Sappho, Virginia Woolf, Alice Coltrane.

Directly funding art is a display of public conscience: putting a few bucks toward the transformation of a historic property into a public center for music and healing, the archiving of a marginal composer’s body of work that may otherwise be lost to time, or a high school hardcore band’s first tour is one way to vote for a sort of continued normalcy. It’s doing your part to ensure beyond a reasonable doubt that, come what may, the choirs will keep singing, the punks will keep photocopying, and we will continue to live in a world more beautiful because there is jazz in it.

Likewise, as we finally begin the arduous process of skimming the scum from atop our societal talent pool, directly funding artists and creative projects is one way to assure that resources remain in the hands of People Who Aren’t Garbage. Even the worst of the worst tend to fall hard without institutional support. Cooperatively organizing around musicians and artists who represent the kind of behavior we’d like to see exhibited in the world is one thing; surrounding a castle of enemies and starving them out, another. Pulling resources is a counter-revolutionary tactic, just as much as providing resources determines who gets to create, who is seen, who is helped, who survives.

This is as much about helping new, unsigned artists develop a base network of care and support as it is about funding institutions and artists who have worked tirelessly for decades so they can continue to operate freely and without interference: a stable model that, if we start hashing it out now, will only benefit us when it turns out to be what we want in the future.

I’m here to help figure out new ways to assure that all of us, no matter where we are on our journey as musicians, feel more-or-less amazing every day we get up and create, sing, compose, bawl, shred, whatever it looks like when we allow ourselves to create freely. To reinforce continually the importance of the arts; to prove there’s still meaning and possibility in a cold world, to show the powers that be how little they can do to stop us from realizing our dreams.

We start with, and amongst, ourselves — we are figuring this out together. I’m so honored to be joining you here in this emergent world, bursting at the seams with song, with more than enough room left over to accommodate every single one of our dreams.

Love, 

Meredith Graves