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Video: David Hasselhoff And Marla Maples Trump sing “If I Were a Carpenter”

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Not many people have seen this video of The Hoff and Marla Maples Trump singing If I Were a Carpenter. It’s from David Hasselhoff’s Pay-Per-View Extravaganza that was broadcast the same night as the O.J. Simpson white Ford Bronco low-speed chase in LA. Thank you, internet.

Seymour Stein To Receive Howie Richmond Hitmaker Award In Songwriters Hall Of Fame

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eymour Stein, co-founder and chairman of Sire Records, will be the 2016 recipient of the prestigious Howie Richmond Hitmaker Award at the Annual Induction and Awards Dinner slated for Thursday, June 9th at the Marriott Marquis Hotel in New York City.

The Howie Richmond Hitmaker Award, named after one of the SHOF’s distinguished founders, is specifically tailored for an artist or “star maker” in the music industry who has been responsible for a substantial number of hit songs for an extended period, and most importantly, recognizes the genuine significance of the song and songwriter. Previous Hitmaker Award honorees have included Clive Davis, Phil Ramone, Whitney Houston, Diana Ross, Doug Morris, Gloria Estefan, Garth Brooks and Sir Tom Jones.

“Seymour Stein is one of the last of the ‘old school record men,’” said SHOF Co-Chairs Kenneth Gamble and Leon Huff. “His longstanding success has been based on his innate ability to anticipate the next musical wave and in signing its brightest lights. As a firm believer that ‘it all begins with a song,’ he epitomizes what the Howie Richmond Hitmaker Award signifies.”

Seymour Stein is the cofounder and chairman of Sire Records, one of the music industry’s most influential record labels and home to some of the most iconic names in modern music. Through its focus on discovering and nurturing distinctive artists and groups, Sire has been a goldmine for cutting-edge music, from popular trailblazers like Talking Heads and Tom Tom Club, Depeche Mode, The Smiths, the Cure, Echo and The Bunnymen, Erasure, The Cult, The Undertones, Madness, The Replacements, Ice T, k.d. lang, Seal, Everything But The Girl, Aztec Camera, Dinosaur Jr., Wilco, My Bloody Valentine, Primal Scream, Aphex Twins, SpaceHog.

Sire put Punk and New Wave on the map in the 1970s and 1980s, and Stein has been the label’s driving creative force since its origins as an independent label and through its tenure as one of the most important imprints within the Warner Bros. Records label family. Stein’s unique ability to anticipate musical trends, and to discover and sign the greatest artists within those movements, has left an indelible mark on pop culture and helped to launch and nurture the careers of some of music’s most memorable artists.

One of those groups was the Ramones, the New York City band that fueled the punk movement. Stein first saw the band in 1975, and was immediately drawn to black leather ethos, angry chords and one-of-a kind loud and fast melodies that are their hallmark. “It was like sticking my hand in a live electric light socket,” Stein recalled of his first exposure to the band. “The jolt went right through me.” The Ramones’ eponymous first album was recorded for less than $10,000 and released on Sire in 1976, and to this day remains one of the seminal albums in rock and roll history.

Stein also saw merit in the Pretenders, who recorded on Sire for nearly two decades. Stein even went further afield to sign Australian punk-rockers like the Saints and Radio Birdman, both of whom have been inducted into the Australian Music Hall of Fame. Along the way, Sire helped revive the notion of Sixties-style pop singles with synth-pop classics like M’s “Pop Muzik,” Plastic Bertrand’s “Ca Plane Pour Moi,” Soft Cell’s “Tainted Love” and Modern English’s “I Melt With You.”

By the early 1980s, Sire had hit its stride as an independent label and was one of the industry’s most influential creative homes. A major non-New Wave discovery during that fertile period was a rising young dance-music artist named Madonna. Sire released her first single (“Everybody”/”Burning Up”) in the fall of 1982, but at a meeting several months earlier sensing her long term staying power, famously held at a Lenox Hill hospital room where he was recuperating from a heart infection, Stein signed Madonna to a multi-album deal. Madonna remained with Sire and Warner Bros., until joining Live Nation in 2007.

The ripples from Stein’s enthusiastic, music-first approach had a positive influence on the music business in general. Sire’s origins date back to 1966, when Stein cofounded Sire Productions with producer Richard Gottehrer. Sire released albums by British progressive-rock acts like Climax Blues Band, Renaissance and Barclay James Harvest as well as Focus from Holland, whose album; Moving Waves was Sire’s first platinum album back in 1973. A believer in the English rock scene since the late 1950’s – long before the British invasion – his passion for music took root during his early days as a Billboard editorial staffer while still in High School. Following High School graduation in 1959 Stein worked in the chart department at Billboard for over two years before moving to Cincinnati to get a grass roots education of the music business at King Records. Stein returned to NY in 1964 to work with George Goldner, who had just joined forces with legendary songwriter Jerry Leiber and Mike Stoller to form Red Bird Records headquartered in the Brill Building, ground zero for the music business back in the day.

Stein’s mentors at the magazine, Chart editor Tom Noonan and legendary music editor Paul Ackerman, introduced him to many indie music men who also mentored him, including the late industry legends, Jerry Wexler and Ahmet Ertegun at Atlantic Records, as well as George Goldner at Redbird Records and, most notably, Syd Nathan at King Records. Four of his six mentors have thus far been inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame, and Stein himself was inducted in 2005. After Billboard, Stein went on to work for King in their Cincinnati headquarters, and later at Redbird in New York’s Brill Building.

In London in the late 1960’s, Stein also met Mike Vernon, who worked for British Decca, where he produced Eric Clapton, John Mayal’s Blues Breakers, Ten Years After, and Savoy Brown Blues Band. Stein and Richard Gottehrer helped Mike Vernon start Blue Horizon, the company that launched the careers of the original Peter Green’s Fleetwood Mac and also Chicken Shack, featuring Christine McVie. Several months later Sire purchased a 50% interest in the label.

In 1976, realizing what a mother lode he had discovered in the Ramones – as well other bands that were bubbling up from the rock underground – Warner Bros. struck a distribution deal with Sire. The partnership lasted until 1995 when Stein was asked by Doug Morris, then Chairman of Warner Music U.S., to move over to Elektra Records as President, where he worked with Chairman Sylvia Rhone for three years. In 1998 Stein left Elektra to reform Sire Records Group as a free-standing company and, after Roger Ames took over as Chairman of Warner Music Group, created London-Sire.

In 2002 Tom Whalley invited Stein back to the Warner Bros. label group and re-launched Sire with the release of Danish band The Hives’ first album. Today Sire remains one of Warner’s most important brands with a roster that includes Regina Spector, HIM, The Veronicas, Tegan & Sara and the more recent addition of Avenged Sevenfold, My Chemical Romance, Never Shout Never, Foxy Shazaam, Ximena, The Ready Set, artists brought to the label by Craig Aaronson and Ryan Whalley. Stein has been associated with Warner Bros. for nearly 35 years, and in 2011, the label will celebrate its 45th Anniversary.

Ken Cheng’s Knockout Performance At The BBC Radio New Comedy Awards

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Comedian Ken Cheng did a detailed breakdown the phrase, “To kill two birds with one stone,” in a stand-up set as part of the BBC Radio New Comedy Award finals. Strangely enough, comedy isn’t his first love. Cheng studied dual-avian projectile mathematics at St John’s College, Cambridge University but dropped out to become a professional poker player.

I’m going to be talking to you about the phrase, “To kill two birds with one stone.” We’ve all heard it. I’ve some issues with this phrase. Firstly, who’s going around throwing stones at birds?

Kid Performs A Solo Version Of ‘Right Hand Man’ From Hamilton

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Quinn Muller, a 13-year-old boy in San Francisco, edited and produced a solo videoof the song “Right Hand Man” by Lin-Manuel Miranda from Hamilton, An American Musical, in which he quite superbly, plays the roles of Alexander Hamilton, George Washington, Aaron Burr along with all of the backup dancers and chorus. The only thing he hasn’t done, is seen the actual play.

Thanks to the magic of motion pictures, I performed all the parts to Lin-Manuel Miranda’s “Right Hand Man” from the hit broadway musical, “Hamilton”. I’m a huge fan of this musical and have been fascinated by Alexander Hamilton for several years. Someday, I hope to see the show in New York and meet Lin-Manuel and the cast.

Methinks he’ll have his opportunity shortly.

Why It’s Okay To Mourn Celebrity Deaths Online

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Being a publicist in the music industry has allowed me to have a bit of an inside view on celebrities and musicians, and the privilege to be called upon to speak about music in the media, and especially recently, deaths of musicians. 2016 has been very busy, sadly.

But while others online are suspicious to see people have an emotional outpouring whenever a celebrity dies, PBS Idea Channel, host Mike Rugnetta very eloquently explains why it’s okay to mourn celebrity deaths online, why some people feel it’s inappropriate and why we even care about these larger-than-life figures, when we’ve never even met them.

The answer to the question posed in the title of this video is yes. Yes, it is ok to mourn a celebrity death online and yes, it’s ok to do each component activity. It’s ok to mourn online and it’s ok to mourn celebrities. …If you would prefer to grieve privately that is your right and no one can follow you there is no one correct way to mourn…being a person in the world is allowing oneself to be affected by a multitude of things, with it many things will have great impact and some of those things will be larger than life entities in the public eye. If you want to deny that artists, heads of state, entrepreneurs and performers can have great emotional aspirational philosophical or intellectual impact on others we can disagree fundamentally and then this conversation is over, but if you allow that such a thing is possible, you also have to allow that such impacts can make people feel like those public figures helped them become themselves. This is why it’s sad that David Bowie died and why I’m allowed to be sad and tweet about it. I didn’t know David Bowie, but at times remarkably like David Bowie knew me and what’s more important at times it felt like he knew who I wanted to be. Same is true for people who mourned Oscar de la Renta, Amy Winehouse, Andy Warhol Glenn Frey, Harper Lee, Princess Diana and John Lennon at their passing and forever after. Losing a creative hero is like losing a great teacher someone who knew things about the world you didn’t but showed them to you in this inviting way that encouraged you to become yourself.

So, go on, cry and hug it all out.

Spotify agrees settlement deal over unpaid publishing royalties

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The National Music Publishers’ Association (NMPA) and Spotify today announced a landmark agreement allowing independent and major publishers to claim and receive royalties for certain compositions used on Spotify in the United States where ownership information was previously unknown. In addition to identifying the rightful recipients of Spotify royalties, the agreement establishes a large bonus compensation fund that is a substantial percentage of what is currently being held by Spotify for unmatched royalties, and creates a better path forward for finding the owners of publishing rights who should receive streaming royalties.

For years, the issue of “unmatched works” — the lack of proper ownership information — has made it difficult to pay timely royalties to writers and publishers. Not only does today’s groundbreaking agreement distribute royalties to writers, it also improves processes for identifying and compensating writers for their work and establishes a better database for future payments. The deal will allow copyright owners to identify their works and receive the money Spotify has set aside for the past usage of unmatched works. It will allow the entire industry to benefit by filling in the gaps in ownership information, which help to ensure that royalties are promptly paid to their rightful owners in the future. Any royalties associated with works that remain unmatched after each claiming period will be distributed to publishers and songwriters who participate in the settlement, but the agreement will not affect the royalties owed to any publisher or writer who does not choose to participate.

The agreement is a key step in improving transparency in the music community and ensuring that music’s creators receive royalties when their music is used. In addition to allowing copyright owners to identify and receive payment for unmatched works, the agreement enables publishers and Spotify to establish improved practices to identify proper ownership and ensure speedy payment of royalties in the future.

National Music Publishers’ Association President and CEO David Israelite praised the agreement, saying, “NMPA’s goal has always been to ensure publishers and songwriters receive the money they deserve. I am thrilled that through this agreement both independent and major publishers and songwriters will be able to get what is owed to them. We must continue to push digital services to properly pay for the musical works that fuel their businesses and after much work together, we have found a way for Spotify to quickly get royalties to the right people. I look forward to all NMPA members being paid what they are owed, and I am excited about the creation of a better process moving forward.”

Spotify Global Head of Communications and Public Policy Jonathan Prince said, “As we have said many times, we have always been committed to paying songwriters and publishers every penny. We appreciate the hard work of everyone at the NMPA to secure this agreement and we look forward to further collaboration with them as we build a comprehensive publishing administration system.”

The agreement includes payment of bonus compensation, and provides the ability to easily identify and properly claim “unmatched” works online. It also ensures that Spotify will continue working with the NMPA and its members to implement practices that will allow Spotify to match works more accurately and efficiently. Where ownership has not been identified or claimed by publishers, there will be a distribution to publishers and songwriters of royalties held by Spotify based on known usage on Spotify’s service.

Your Kid Is Late For School Because Of Springsteen’s Show? He’ll Sign A Note For You

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Bruce Springsteen’s River tour is long – like around 25 songs on a normal night. And that makes trouble for students being unable to make it to school on time.

On Tuesday night, The Boss played to a sold-out crowd at the Los Angeles Sports Arena. 35 songs. 3 hours and 29 minutes.

And that caused a problem for the son of Scott Glovsky.

However, Springsteen came to the rescue, signing the youngster’s tardy note.

The JUNO Awards Merch This Year Is A Throwback, And It’s Awesome

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Here’s the thing: Canadians know good music. We always have. We always will. There’s something about that “True North Strong and Free” that creates the perfect conditions for the sweetest sounds. There’s nothing like turning on the radio, hearing a great tune, and bragging loudly “They’re Canadian.” With glowing hearts, with gleeful pride, with enthusiastic resolve, The JUNO Awards, Canada, and around the world celebrate our music. The JUNOs have revealed this year’s merch, designed by JUNO Award winner Justin Broadbent, and they’re all winners. Watch The JUNO Awards hand out a slew of awards on Saturday, April 2nd online at their site, and the rest of the awards and performances Sunday, April 3 on CTV.

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The 2016 JUNO Awards “Glowing Hearts” Yupoong Classics brand snapback hats feature a front embroidery, back custom / sewn on tag and adjustable fitment.

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The 2016 JUNO Awards “Glowing Hearts” Tee! Printed on super soft cotton, fitted t-shirts, with a front chest print and custom sewn-on tag. Where it loud and proud, Canada.

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Relive the ‘70s with The JUNO Awards “1978 Revival” Tee! The retro JUNO logo was used on JUNO Award statuettes back in the day. When you rock this t-shirt, it’s almost as if you’ve got your own!

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Pretend like you’re in the ‘70s while you sip your coffee from The JUNO Awards “1978 Revival” Mug! The retro JUNO logo was used on JUNO Award statuettes back in the day. It may not be an award, but after you drink from it, you’ll definitely feel like you’re winning!

Bill Murray On The Loneliness Of Fame

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What’s the best and worst thing about being Bill Murray?

“The worst thing about it, they’re one in the same: You wish you could walk down the street and look at things and watch things uninterrupted. The shock of being recognized brings you out of this place where you’re just trying to take it in. It’s an obligation and you’re reminded you have to show up. It’s a coin with two sides. As much as I don’t like the one side, the other side is what might save me.”

What would your ideal superpower would be?
“Invisibility.”

Via

What Ani DiFranco Is Reading This Month

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On Ani DiFranco’s website, she affectionately posts her favourite books of the month, an idea more artists should do, really. This month, it’sTa-Nehisi Coates’ Between The World And Me.

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this book floored me with its ability to make me (someone who has never experienced what its like to be a black man in America) feel not only the physical peril but the subliminal sabotage of mind and heart that racism perpetrates. addressed from Coates to his son, the pages pulse with the poignant tension of a father torn between trying to caution his somewhat less-damaged son about the limits to, or even the fallacy of, his inclusion in the white power structure, and trying to back-off and allow his son to grow up feeling freer and more hopeful than he ever has. this is a book filled with deeply examined social dynamics and rhythmic sloshes of poetry. it has the power to touch the heart of any parent who aches for their child to have the opportunity to surpass them but fears that a heartbreaking disillusionment lies ahead.