David Bowie has died at the age of 69, 18 months after being diagnosed with cancer.
The singer’s death was confirmed in a post via his Facebook page this morning: “David Bowie died peacefully today surrounded by his family after a courageous 18 month battle with cancer. While many of you will share in this loss, we ask that you respect the family’s privacy during their time of grief.”
Bowie’s son, Duncan Jones, also confirmed the news via a Tweet, writing: “Very sorry and sad to say it’s true. I’ll be offline for a while.” Bowie released his latest album, Black Star, just last week on his 69th birthday.
Except for Paul McCartney, there might not be another musician as influential as Bowie. Even if you never got into his music, your favourite artist certainly has.
A conversation about “Billions,” a new drama about hedge fund billionaires. Charlie Rose is joined by stars Damian Lewis and Paul Giamatti and creators Brian Koppelman and Andrew Ross Sorkin.
Founding member and guitarist of Joy Division and the lead singer of New Order, Bernard Sumner has been famous over the years for his reticence. Until now. An integral part of the Manchester music scene since the late 1970s, Chapter And Verse is the definitive version of the events that created two of the most influential bands of all time. It’s a welcome trip back in time.
Chapter and Verse includes a vivid and illuminating account of Bernard Sumner’s childhood, the early days of Joy Division, the band’s enormous critical and popular success, and the subsequent tragic death of Ian Curtis. Sumner describes the formation of New Order, takes us behind the scenes at the birth of classics such as “Blue Monday,” and gives his firsthand account of the ecstasy and the agony of the Haçienda days. Sumner is actually better in writing his story, than in interviews, given his time spent thinking his words over.
“Los Angeles produced the Beach Boys. Dusseldorf produced Kraftwerk. New York produced Chic. Manchester produced Joy Division.
The Beach Boys’ harmonies were full of warmth and sunshine, Kraftwerk’s groundbreaking electronic pop was suffused with Germany’s post-war economic and technological resurgence while Chic’s music thrummed with the joyous hedonism of late seventies New York.
Joy Division sounded like Manchester: cold, sparse and, at times, bleak.”
Sometimes moving, often hilarious, and occasionally completely out of control, this is a tale populated by some of the most colorful and creative characters in music history, such as Ian Curtis, Tony Wilson, Rob Gretton, and Martin Hannett.
He says in The Independent, “I should have called it Private Parts. We’re all private people, but as a musician I think that once you get to the point where there’s more of your life behind you than in front of you, you owe it to your public to explain yourself.”
Sumner is quite honest when it comes to New Order’s past work. “I don’t have fond memories of Movement, and it’s certainly far from my favourite New Order album. I played it once or twice after it was finished and decided I didn’t like it. I felt all the edges had been smoothed off and it was devoid of its own identity and uniqueness. I really missed Ian being there and his absence was something I was very aware of throughout the entire process.”
What I was really looking forward to was his take on his Electronic group, formed with ex-Smith guitarist Johnny Marr. I loved their three records, even handled the PR for the Twisted Tenderness reissue. “Electronic was very much a pressure-release valve for the two of us because we’d both found ourselves in fraught situations. Johnny’s predicament was different from mine in that The Smiths had actually split up, whereas I needed to get a bit of a distance in New Order and myself n order to revive my creative energy and come back stronger to fight another day.”
But it’s one paragraph that stands out, and details what every fan wants to know when their favourite band splits up. What happened? Why? Sumner is bang on the money: “It’s inevitable that you’ll build up little niggles with each other, little things you dislike. If you travel on a bus or a train now, there’ll usually be a kid playing tinny music through his mobile phone, or some business man on his iPhone sitting next to you, until you feel like punching him in the face. In a band, that feeling is multiplied and intensified 24/7. Even if you’re lucky to be in a band were there are no significant egos, the tension inevitably builds up until the whole thing reaches breaking point.”
Sumner is never short of killer melodies – and now stories. Chapter And Verse speaks volumes from one of the great writers of our generation.
Vinyl LP sales in Canada in 2015 posted the biggest overall sales total in the SoundScan era since 1991, with a sales increase of 30% over 2014. As you can see below, the numbers aren’t huge compared to digital albums, but it’s a great format building lifelong fans.
Title/Artist Vinyl Sales
1 25 / Adele 6,200
2 1989 / Taylor Swift 6,000
3 X / Ed Sheeran 4,800
4 AM / Arctic Monkeys 3,800
5 In The Lonely Hour / Sam Smith 3,700
6 Abbey Road / Beatles 3,300
7 Hozier / Hozier 3,200
8 Dark Side Of The Moon / Pink Floyd 3,200
9 Wilder Mind / Mumford & Sons 3,000
10 Led Zeppelin IV / Led Zeppelin 2,600
11 Legend / Bob Marley & The Wailers 2,400
12 Kind Of Blue / Miles Davis 2,400
13 Nevermind / Nirvana 2,300
14 Ultraviolence / Lana Del Rey 2,200
15 If I Should Go Before You / City And Colour 2,200
16 Dream Your Life Away / Vance Joy 2,100
17 Guardians Of The Galaxy Awesome Mix Vol. 1 / Soundtrack 2,100
18 Honeymoon / Lana Del Rey 2,100
19 Chronicles / Creedence Clearwater Revival 2,000
20 Sgt. Pepper’s Lonely Hearts Club Band / Beatles 2,000
Although this clip is from 2012, it’s going viral now. Percussion group ЭТНОБИТ (Ethnobeat) transformed the sheets of ice on Siberia’s frozen Lake Baikal into a pretty cool musical instrument.
David Kwong is both a magician and a professional crossword maker. He’s also Head Magic Consultant on “Now You See Me”, and one of his staple tricks is based on the popular puzzle. Just watch along to be amazed.
Life doesn’t end when Alzheimer’s begins. People living with dementia can continue to participate in life and contribute to their communities – in their own way, even as the disease progresses. “#StillHere,” created by Toronto-based Brees Communications, includes a 30-second video spot showing a woman revealing herself to the viewer and reminding them that despite living with Alzheimer’s disease, she’s “still here.”
Check out this short, but amazing clip of The Fifth Dimension performing with Frank Sinatra on his 1968 TV special ‘Francis Albert Sinatra Does His Thing’. Even though The Voice is looking a little awkward at times, he soon feels a bit relaxed singing a drinking song written by Laura Nyro.
On a December morning in 1970, the King of Rock ’n Roll showed up on the lawn of the White House to request a meeting with the most powerful man in the world, President Nixon. Starring Academy Award nominee Michael Shannon as Elvis Presley and two-time Academy Award winner Kevin Spacey as Richard Nixon, comes the untold true story behind this revealing, yet humorous moment in the Oval Office forever immortalized in the most requested photograph in the National Archives.