On Monday night’s Jimmy Kimmel Live, David Gilmour performed “Rattle That Lock” and Pink Floyd’s “Wish You Were Here,” marking his first television appearance in the U.S. in 10 years.
https://youtu.be/LTGwB6CBuX0
https://youtu.be/DcGju-xvcZM
On Monday night’s Jimmy Kimmel Live, David Gilmour performed “Rattle That Lock” and Pink Floyd’s “Wish You Were Here,” marking his first television appearance in the U.S. in 10 years.
https://youtu.be/LTGwB6CBuX0
https://youtu.be/DcGju-xvcZM
On Monday night at Madison Square Garden, Bruce Springsteen and the E Street Band made a stop on their tour commemorating the 1980 album, The River. In the audience was Springsteen’s 90-year-old mother, Adele. As he performed “Ramrod,” The Boss paid her a visit and the two shared a dance, and a sweet hug and kiss.
Soundcloud is entering paid music streaming, hoping to turn its huge community of cover singers, dubstep remixers and wannabe stars into a bigger source of revenue.
Since its launch in 2007, the Berlin-based online music service has allowed pretty much any audio to be uploaded to its cloud — from Kanye West outtakes to teenagers singing over canned music. It has slowly introduced tools to earn revenue, introducing paid services for artists in 2008 and ad revenue sharing for invited musicians in 2014.
But after signing deals with major labels, including holdout Sony Music this month, Soundcloud is adding a subscription plan for consumers, giving them ad-free listening and a whole range of music from mainstream artists that had shunned the service because it only gave tracks away for free, including top acts like Taylor Swift.
Soundcloud, privately held and with tech investors like Union Square Ventures and Kleiner Perkins, will have a staggering 125 million tracks available when the paid tier, Soundcloud Go, launches Tuesday. That’s about four times other paid services.
Soundcloud Go will cost $10 a month and offer ad-free offline playback on mobile devices. It’ll also allow artists to choose whether to give away tracks for free or reserve them for paying customers — an option not allowed by Spotify, which depends on having quality free music to draw in prospective paying customers.
“You can’t change your destiny, but you can create your own,” captioned on the YouTube page of this inspirational video.
https://youtu.be/3bdm4NBYxII
A chalkboard stood in the middle of New York City asking passersby to write down their biggest regrets. As the board filled up, A Plus noticed that all of these responses had one alarming thing in common.
Go on, watch the video. And then take that leap to not be afraid to say, to do, and to be.
All I think about is what it would be like to drum in Genesis back in the 80s. These people clearly have deeper thoughts.
via Shower Thoughts
We all know about the power of music that speaks to our souls. Watch the story about this power that made a news anchor cry.
In the irreverent spirit of fun that made ‘The LEGO® Movie’ a worldwide phenomenon, the self-described leading man of that ensemble – LEGO Batman – stars in his own big-screen adventure. But there are big changes brewing in Gotham, and if he wants to save the city from The Joker’s hostile takeover, Batman may have to drop the lone vigilante thing, try to work with others and maybe, just maybe, learn to lighten up.
February 13th, 1985 saw the releases of Witness, The Breakfast Club, and Dune. And while Wham!’s Careless Whisper was #1 on the Billboard Chart, all the kids were watching Mister Rogers breakdance on national television for the first time, thanks to 12-year-old instructor Jermaine Vaughn.
https://youtu.be/Fw_GnjE-des