Home Blog Page 2959

Polaris Music Prize Announces Increase To $50,000

0

This past Saturday at the Slaight Music CMW Social, Steve Jordan, Founder and Executive Director of the Polaris Music Prize, and Gary Slaight, President of Slaight Music, announced that Slaight will contribute an additional $20,000 to the Prize, bringing the total to $50,000. In addition, Slaight will also increase their contribution to the Short List prizes from $2,000 to $3,000. 

Along with these additional contributions, Polaris announced The Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize, a new award that will annually honour five albums from the five decades before Polaris launched in 2006. Further details about the dates and selection process of this new prize will be revealed in the coming months.

“We’re ecstatic that Gary and Derrick from Slaight music have stepped up to help us celebrate our tenth year in a huge way. Although it’s impossible to put a dollar figure on great art, this increase bring us more in line with other major arts awards like the Scotiabank Giller Prize,” said Jordan. “And while this money is hugely generous, we are as excited to extend the Polaris conversation to the rich legacy of classic records from Canadian history. We get to officially pose a long time informal argument; what would be nominated for Polaris before it existed?”

We’ve been proud supporters of the Polaris Music Prize for many years and wanted to celebrate their ten years by awarding more funds to the winners and nominees,” said Gary Slaight. “In addition, we wanted to make a more lasting contribution. Launching The Slaight Family Polaris Heritage Prize is the perfect way for our Family to show its appreciation for the greats of Canadian music through the respected Polaris filter.”

The Polaris Music Prize Long List announcement will head to Halifax, NS on June 16th. The forty titles will be announced at the world famous Carleton music venue and will run in conjunction with the team at Halifax Pop Explosion.

The Short List will be unveiled on July 16th at The Carlu in Toronto, and the Polaris Music Prize Gala will return to The Carlu for its third year, taking place on Monday, September 21st.  Aux.tv will once again stream the gala live.

The eligibility period for the 2015 Polaris Music Prize runs from June 1, 2014 to May 31, 2015. An independent jury of 196 music journalists, broadcasters and music bloggers from across Canada determines the Long List and Short List. Eleven people are selected from the larger jury pool to serve on the Grand Jury. They will convene the night of the gala to select the Polaris Music Prize winner.

The Polaris Music Prize will award $50,000 to the artist who creates the Canadian Album of the Year. Courtesy of Slaight Music, each of the nine other short listed artists will receive $3,000. Judged solely on artistic merit, without consideration of genre or record sales, the prize’s past winners have included Tanya Tagaq (2014), Godspeed You! Black Emperor (2013), Feist (2012), Arcade Fire (2011), Karkwa (2010), Fucked Up (2009), Caribou (2008), Patrick Watson (2007), and Final Fantasy / Owen Pallett (2006).

Polaris Music Prize 2015 Key Dates:

June 16th – Long List announcement – The Carleton, Halifax, NS

July 16th – Short List announcement – The Carlu, Toronto, ON

September 21st – Polaris Music Prize Gala – The Carlu, Toronto, ON

Toto’s Dave Paich On Writing And The Success Of ‘Africa’

0

“I would see UNICEF commercials on TV, way back in the day, and I was a big reader of National Geographic. I’ve just always kind of been fascinated with Africa. I just kind of romanticized this story about a social worker that was over there, that falls in love and can’t — is having kind of a paradox, trying to tear himself away from Africa to actually have a life.

“I went to an all-boys Catholic school, and there were a lot of brothers that were teaching us there, and they were going to Africa and coming back. A lot of them were deciding whether to go into the priesthood, or whether to get married or not, and there were a lot of issues — like, celibacy was obviously a big issue. I had all these things rattling about in my brain when I was writing the song. All these thoughts about priests and young social workers that have gone over there, devoting their lives to helping people, and having to choose what kind of life they’re going to have — whether to keep doing this, what I’m doing here, or can I have a life, get married, have kids, and do that kind of thing. So it was a life choice mixed in with a geographical fascination there.

“We had finished our record, so when I started writing that, they were like, ‘Dave, why don’t you save this for your solo album?’ It’s kind of the joke — when someone writes a song that doesn’t really fit into the Toto mold, the joke is, everybody says, ‘Save that for your solo album.’ So the band kind of indulged me and let me start working on this track for it. This one barely made it; it just got on the end of the Toto IV album. It’s the one that didn’t get away, you know?

“It’s a very special song, you know? I was asked to perform it at the United Nations, to bring on Bishop Desmond Tutu, when he got a humanitarian award there. Then, in the late ’90s, we were able to go back to South Africa, after apartheid was ended, and we were able to play Capetown and Johannesburg and play ‘Africa,’ with some of the local musicians there and singers. It was quite a treat for us. It was just like a pinch-me moment. And at the same time, it’s become a kind of icon, a humorous icon. When it was on Family Guy, the world found out Toto doesn’t take itself all that seriously. We thought it was funny. Then we saw Justin Timberlake and Jimmy Fallon do a little skit on ‘Africa,’ and we really enjoyed that.

Via Grantland

Miley Cyrus Launches Homeless Youth Foundation

0

20% to 40% of America’s homeless are LGBTQ.

PM-0fffdaf7d9e677b1b658758643088ec3

And Miley Cyrus is doing something about it. She’s using her celebrity to bring awareness to the largely LGBT homeless youth community.

Every grunt, scream, and yelp Michael Jackson ever recorded

0

Ugh! HeeHee! Owwww! Here’s every grunt, scream and emotive yelp Michael Jackson every committed to vinyl. This is why the internet was created.

Shania Twain and Panthera Launch the #IFAKEIT Social Media Campaign to Save Leopards

0

International superstar Shania Twain and Panthera, a global wild cat conservation organization, have launched #IFAKEIT – a social media campaign to raise awareness for one of fashion’s most revered but underrepresented icons – the leopard.

Referred to as the ‘new neutral,’ this cat’s spotted print has inspired fashion for centuries, influencing style from catwalks to sidewalks, celebrities and even first ladies. The purpose of this campaign is to connect the dots, and inform the general public that while the spots they are wearing are so widespread, the real leopard is under serious threat.

Every year, more leopards are killed in the wild than any other big cat. The species has vanished from nearly 40% of its range in Africa and over 50% in Asia. And it is their beauty that is partly responsible. While leopards are also in jeopardy from loss of habitat and conflict with people, the demand for their skins is one of the main causes of their decline.

Even though the international trade in leopard skin is now illegal, it is still common for local communities in Africa and Asia to use real leopard skins for religious and cultural ceremonies, whether worn as capes or used for other traditional regalia.

Panthera’s Furs for Life Leopard Project is providing a simple and sustainable solution that protects leopards but also supports local culture. Collaborating with digital designers, Panthera has created a high-quality and realistic faux leopard skin to replace the authentic skins worn at ceremonies.More than 5,000 faux leopard capes have already been donated in southern Africa, and Panthera’s new partnership with the Peace Parks Foundation and Cartier has enabled the distribution of at least another 13,000 more capes before the end of 2017 (Read the press release about this partnership here.)

“I was shocked to learn that these gorgeous animals are being killed for their beautiful skins and other parts for the illegal trade, and yet are so loved by the fashion world. We wanted to capitalize on the fact that people everywhere are wearing more leopard print than ever, but so few know what’s actually happening to them in the wild,” said Shania Twain, Panthera’s Leopard Ambassador. “With Panthera, we aim to begin this conversation and generate awareness for leopards on a grand scale, while giving people something tangible to grasp, and engage in a fun and impactful way.”

To do this, Shania Twain and Panthera have launched the #IFAKEIT campaign and are asking people around the globe to join the movement and show how they ‘fake it’ for leopards by posting photos of themselves wearing fake leopard print to Twitter, Instagram and Facebook with the #IFAKEIT tag. People can also donate to the campaign at ifakeit.org, where just $30 can support the creation of one fake leopard skin and save a leopard’s life.

The campaign first aims to generate 18,000 unique mentions tagged with #IFAKEIT on social media, to accompany each donated cape, as a thank you to the communities willing to fake it and to stop leopards from being killed for their skins. The campaign also aims to raise $300,000 for the creation of at least 5,000 new fake leopard skins to distribute to communities outside of southern Africa, and to support other conservation activities to protect leopards across their range.

Lizwi Ncwane, an elder and legal adviser of the Nazareth Baptist ‘Shembe’ Church, stated, “As a leader of the Shembe community, I have seen firsthand how receptive my community is to using these fake skins. Not only do they look and feel like real leopard skins, they also last longer. We’re grateful that Panthera has worked with us in finding a solution that interweaves the conservation of leopards with the customs of the Shembe.”

Panthera’s Leopard Program Director, Dr. Guy Balme, explained, “Panthera’s Furs for Life Leopard Project is providing an innovative and real solution to a threat that is decimating leopard populations. Very rarely in the world of conservation do you see a resolution this simple and respectful of cultural and religious traditions that is so swiftly accepted by local communities.”

Dr. Balme continued, “In just a few years, we have seen a positive and deeply-rooted cultural shift in the adoption of Panthera’s fake leopard skins in southern Africa. We hope the #IFAKEIT campaign will help bring much-needed attention to the plight of leopards and help spark a movement that ensures the species, and not just the images of their beauty, remain long into the future.”

Visit ifakeit.org to learn how to ‘Show Your Spots, So You Can Save Theirs.’

What To Expect From HBO’s 2015 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame Induction Ceremony Program

0

The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame 2015 Induction Ceremony happens Saturday, May 30th at 8PM, only on HBO, and here’s a sneak peek on what you’ll see.

Video: Stream The Full Faith No More Concert From Detroit

0

Faith No More teamed up with Live Nation and Yahoo! to live-stream the band’s May 8 concert from The Fillmore in Detroit, Michigan. This is one of 365 concerts to stream over a 12-month period on the Live Nation channel on Yahoo! Screen. Look for original lead singer Chuck Mosley during the encore, too.

If you missed it, here’s the complete show:

https://youtu.be/QW5mX9bgp18

Setlist:
Motherfucker
From Out of Nowhere
Caffeine
Evidence
Epic
Sunny Side Up
Surprise! You’re Dead!
Midlife Crisis (With ‘Rich Girl’ by Hall & Oates interlude)
Everything’s Ruined
The Gentle Art of Making Enemies
Easy (Commodores cover)
Spirit
King for a Day
Ashes to Ashes
Superhero

Encore:
Sol Invictus
This Guy’s in Love With You (Burt Bacharach cover)
Mark Bowen (with Chuck Mosley)

Encore 2:
From the Dead

Richard Pryor’s Saturday Morning Kids’ Show, Pryor’s Place, Was Pretty Great

0

I can safely say that no matter how many publicist a troubled rock star or pop idol employs to attempt to change their image, here’s one that will always be the one to bear – On June 9, 1980, during the making of the film Bustin’ Loose, Pryor set himself on fire after freebasing cocaine and drinking 151-proof rum. While on fire, he ran down Parthenia Street from his Los Angeles, California, home, until being subdued by police. Pryor was married seven times to five different women. He magnificently swore almost every 4th word in concert. Richard Pryor had a kids’ show. Pryor’s Place was a sort of an tougher, but still child-friendly version of Sesame Street. The now rarely-seen program was produced by Sid and Marty Krofft and had theme music by Ray Parker Jr., who was also in the opening credits.

“(Whoa-oh-oh) Let’s get on over to Pryor’s Place (Whoa-oh-oh) We’re gonna party, so don’t be late. We’ve got friends who live in the street The craziest people you’ll ever meet on Pryor’s Place! (Whoa-oh-OOOH) Pryor’s Place!”

https://youtu.be/N-hKox1uxPY

Toronto Mayor John Tory Accepts International Festival City of the Year Award at Canadian Music Week

0

Following John Tory’s opening remarks at this week’s Global Forum: International Networking Breakfast, Canadian Music Week President Neill Dixon presented the Toronto Mayor with the inaugural International Festival City of the Year award.

“I am pleased to be here today to present an inaugural award that is created as a way for the global festival industry to recognize positive local environments for festivals and events worldwide,” said Dixon in his presentation. “Through this special award, Canadian Music Week is pleased to recognize Toronto for its consorted efforts to provide an environment that allows for successful and environmentally conducive events.”

Upon accepting the award, Tory offered congratulations to Canadian Music Week for their long history and continuous efforts to raise the profile of Canadian music. “Toronto might be the single most diverse city in the world,” he offered. “Music is the universal language; what better way to bring all of those people together.”

A panel discussion on the state of the creative class, hosted by Globe and Mail columnist Kate Taylor, followed the presentation.

Canadian Music Week is Canada’s leading annual entertainment event dedicated to the expression and growth of the country’s music, media and entertainment industries. Combining three information-intensive conferences; a trade exposition; a film festival; a comedy festival; four awards shows and the nation’s largest new music festival, CMW spans a ten-day period from May 1 to May 10, 2015 at the Sheraton Centre Toronto Hotel and over 60 downtown Toronto venues, attracting participants from across the globe. For more information, visit here.

Big Machine’s Scott Borchetta on the fear of failure

0

“We have a mantra at the Big Machine Label Group: Start with crazy and work backward,” Scott Borchetta said. “It all started early on in the development of the label. We started off with 13 people and I called it Big Machine because we were anything but a Big Machine. it was the most disruptive middle-finger that I could give to Nashville to just declare us a Big Machine because we were anything but. We were thinking, ‘What’s the craziest thing we can do?’ And when you invite crazy into the room, crazy becomes the reality. We came up with all these crazy ideas that Taylor Swift could be the biggest artist in the world and it came true, and that we could have five labels and become the biggest independent record company in the world and it came true.”

With all of Big Machine’s well-known successes (Swift, Tim McGraw, the Band Perry, Florida Georgia Line) the label chief executive spoke candidly about how the fear of failure helps motivate him. “We almost lost everything with in the first six months,” Borchetta said. “It was that perseverance that finally broke through and we never looked back from that moment. There was literally a few days where I had signed artists, I had executives on payroll, the whole thing, and i was going to lose all of it. It was like get up, get to warrior. I tell all of my crew that. It might be a tough day, but get to warrior.”

Via Billboard