Home Blog Page 3188

Bon Jovi are releasing a 25-LP vinyl box set

0

With over 130 million albums sold, an extensive catalog of hit anthems, and nearly 3000 concerts performed in 50 countries for over 35 million fans, Bon Jovi is simply one of the world’s most successful bands, ever. As their new album, This House Is Not For Sale, debuts at #1 in the US, Australia and Japan and in the Top 5 in 54 other countries, Island/UMe announces that a comprehensive vinyl box set of 25-LPs, entitled Bon Jovi: The Albums, will be released in February 2017. It will include all Bon Jovi albums and additional titles (as outlined below) for premium collectors. The box set release will coincide with the kick-off of the band’s This House Is Not For Sale Tour in North America.

Alternately, Island/UMe has made every Bon Jovi album from the past thirty-two years available for individual purchase on high-quality vinyl now.

Every vinyl album preserves the original look and sound of the originals – all LP jackets are exact replicas of the original album cover and songs have been mastered to the band’s specifications to ensure exceptional audio quality. There are also plenty of “firsts” – this will be the first time Bon Jovi’s albums from the 2000’s have been pressed in any territory before, others will receive their first-ever U.S. vinyl releases, while many are being pressed for the first time in decades.

Bon Jovi has created some of the most recognizable songs ever. From ubiquitous hits like “Livin’ On A Prayer,” “You Give Love A Band Name,” “Bad Medicine,” “Always” and “It’s My Life” to back-to-back-to-back-to-back #1 albums – Lost Highway, The Circle, What About Now, and This House Is Not For Sale – their music, filled with indelible melodies and infectious hooks has created an enduring, ongoing legacy.

The band’s 14th album, This House Is Not For Sale, is available now on Island/UMG, and reunites Bon Jovi with Grammy Award®-winning producer John Shanks, who began working with the band in 2005, on the RIAA platinum Have A Nice Day, which entered the charts at #1 in 15 countries worldwide. This is Bon Jovi’s first major release since 2013’s What About Now, which was the band’s third consecutive multi-platinum album to enter Soundscan at #1 (following Lost Highway in 2007 and The Circle in 2009).

Unison Holiday Schmoozefest 2016 Now Onsale

0

Tickets are on sale now for the Unison Holiday Schmoozefest’s triumphant return! With even more prizes, special guest DJ Brendan Canning, and the Big Jolly Man himself, this is one industry party you wont want to miss! The Unison Holiday Social is a chance to celebrate the season with notable Canadian music professionals and artists. No potluck offering or secret Santa gift required!

The Schmoozefest is happening Monday, December 12 at the Spice Route Asian Bistro + Bar (499 King St West) in Toronto. Tickets are $25 and all proceeds go directly towards supporting the work of the Unison Benevolent Fund.

Click here for tickets.

New BC Music Fund programs are coming soon

0

With industry consultation and feedback from the Sound Recording Pilot Program, Creative BC has developed six new funding programs to support all aspects of BC’s Music Industry. Programs will launch between December and March, with full instructions on how to apply. If you have already subscribed to this newsletter, you will be first to receive program opening alerts and BC Music Fund news.

The following suite of programs will support artists, music companies, industry associations, innovators, venues, event producers, and sector collaborations.

Fore more details, click here.

Danzig’s “Mother” Reimagined As A Lounge Song, While Using Original Vocals

0

Andy Rehfeldt unleaches the metal guitar riffs of Glenn Danzig and company replaced with softer, more lounge-friendly instruments and rhythms, with the vocals left intact. The wind chime at 1:23 is pure gold.

Thief Makes Unusual Purchase With Stolen Credit Card…A Home Security Camera

0

Deputies in Jefferson County are searching for a man who used a stolen credit card to purchase a home security system that will help prevent theft.

The Jefferson County Sheriff’s Office tweeted a series of surveillance pictures of the suspect as he walked out of a store in Jefferson County.

On Oct. 6 the suspect got the credit card out of a purse he stole by breaking through a parked car window outside Aspire Fitness on West Bowles Avenue in Littleton.

Via

Donald Passman on what successful artists have in common

0

“They definitely do things differently … The funny thing is, it’s not about talent, because I’ve known some incredibly talented people that have had only moderate careers or no careers at all. The real keys to success are drive and determination. You need to be willing to walk through walls to get to where you need to go and not get discouraged. I think that is something really big they have all had in common.” – Donald Passman, entertainment attorney, author of Everything You Need to Know about the Music Business, on what successful artists have in common

Via

Jimmy Fallon, Metallica & The Roots Sing “Enter Sandman” With Classroom Instruments

0

Metallica joins Jimmy Fallon and The Roots in the Tonight Show Music Room to perform “Enter Sandman” with classroom instruments.

https://youtu.be/GXJifYl_byU

Seymour Stein On Jethro Tull

0

I was at the Windsor Pop & Jazz Festival in 1966 or 1967. Jethro Tull were playing and they were unsigned. Mike Vernon was a producer then. I said to him: ‘Look, this band is great.’ And he said to me: ‘Oh Seymour, I could never work with a flautist.’ I didn’t know what a flautist was — we called them flute players! I thought he meant he was a deviant or something.

So I turned to Gus Dudgeon, who was sitting to the other side of me. He was an engineer who became Elton John’s producer, and I told him: ‘You could be involved in [Jethro Tull] — you could be their engineer.’ He said to me: ‘Seymour, obviously you don’t play a musical instrument. If you did, you’d have heard all the mistakes they made.’

Via

Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library Now Distributes 1 Million Books A Month

0

Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library, which began as a small community outreach in Parton’s native Sevier County, Tennessee, has evolved to become the largest literacy program in the world. In December, the “little literacy program that could” marks another impressive milestone—one million books gifted to children around the world each month.

To celebrate the unprecedented success, Evey Johns, a two-year-old from Conway, Arkansas who just enrolled in the Imagination Library, has been randomly selected to receive a $30,000 college scholarship. The announcement was made by Parton during her Pure & Simple concert tour stop in Pigeon Forge, Tennessee on Nov. 15. Proceeds from the concert benefit the Imagination Library.

“I thought long and hard about the best way to honor our achievement of reaching a million children a month,” Parton said. “The Imagination Library is all about inspiring dreams, so what better way to pay tribute to this moment than by helping one special child pursue her college degree. I’m thrilled that today I can let the world know that precious little Evey Johns from Conway, Arkansas will receive a $30,000 scholarship for the college of her choice.”

The scholarship will be held in a special account and distributed to Johns when she enrolls in college. Over the next 16 years, the amount of scholarship should grow to nearly approximately $50,000. Johns is enrolled in the Imagination Library in Conway thanks to the local affiliate in her area, Arkansas Preschool Plus.

“The thought of our daughter Evey going to college has been just that—a thought,” explained Evey’s mother, Connie. “Now, due to the enormous kindness and generosity of the Dollywood Foundation, that thought has now become a reality. Our family now has the means to develop a solid plan for our daughter’s future education. Thank you all so much for this unbelievable opportunity for our daughter.”

In 2016, the Imagination Library and its local partners will gift nearly 11.5 million books to children from birth to age five in participating communities in the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom and Australia. To date, the Imagination Library, which is administered through the Dollywood Foundation, has provided more than 85 million books to children around the world.

Arkansas Preschool Plus is just one of the many local affiliates the Dollywood Foundation works with to provide books to children. To provide the Imagination Library, a community must make the program accessible to all preschool children in their area, and the community pays for the books, promotes the program and registers the children. The Dollywood Foundation manages the delivery of books to children’s homes.

Arkansas Preschool Plus enrolls 960 children in Conway, Faulkner and Perry Counties. Currently, nearly 15,000 children are enrolled in Arkansas. The Imagination Library currently is working with elected officials, foundations and corporations in Arkansas in an effort to make the program available to all children from birth to age five in the state.

Founded in 1995, Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library is a book gifting organization that has, to date, mailed more than 85 million books to children in Australia, Belize, Canada, United Kingdom and the United States. Each month, the program currently mails more than one million specially selected, high-quality, age-appropriate books to registered children from birth until they start Kindergarten in participating communities. Dolly envisioned creating a lifelong love of reading in children, preparing them for school and inspiring them to dream. Recent studies suggest participation in the Imagination Library is positively and significantly associated with higher measures of early language and math development. Penguin Random House is the exclusive publisher for Dolly Parton’s Imagination Library.

Governor General of Canada to present Fran Herman, Canadian pioneer of music therapy, with Meritorious Service Medal

0

His Excellency the Right Honourable David Johnston, Governor General of Canada, announced that the Meritorious Service Medal (Civil Division) will be presented to Mrs. Fran Herman, one of the pioneers of music therapy in Canada, and the first Chair of the Canadian Music Therapy Trust Fund. Fran will receive her award from the Governor General this Friday, at the Music Therapy Centre she founded in Toronto.

After decades of being a Music Therapist (MTA) working with children with special needs, Fran used her unique skills as a story teller, author, an advocate for persons coping through challenging circumstances, and her passion for the profession of music therapy to do what some claimed was impossible – raise over $4 million with the support of the Canadian music industry.
These funds pioneered music therapy programs and research across the country and financed free and subsidized music therapy at the Toronto Music Therapy Centre.

To raise these funds Fran used the most simple of all media – connecting with people. Fran mobilized a team seemingly simply by telling them about the histories of children she worked with and how music therapy had transformed their lives. The work and visibility of the Canadian Music Therapy Trust Fund and the Music Therapy Centre (both continue to this day) reach individuals of all ages across the country and inspire programs internationally. To date, her efforts have contributed to the funding of over 400 music therapy projects from coast to coast to coast, enabling new research, new program development and direct music therapy services to reach thousands of men, women, children and seniors with different needs (physical disabilities, palliative care, mental health, just to name a few) in healthcare and special education settings.

Music therapy is a research-based practice and profession in which music is used to actively support people as they strive to improve their health, functioning and well-being. Music therapists incorporate a range of music making methods within and through a therapeutic relationship. They are employed in a variety of sectors including health, community, aged care, disability, early childhood, and private practice. Music therapy is different from music education and entertainment as it focuses on health, functioning and well-being. Music therapists are committed to supporting people of any age and ability regardless of musical skill, culture or background and they use the power of music to heal, rehabilitate, and promote wellness across a broad array of challenges, including autism, Alzheimer’s, depression, physical disability, homeless youth, and assisting with end of life care. Brain imaging has shown that music affects our brains like no other experience, and that the way our brain engages in music is special. Music engages the whole brain, giving it the power to bypass injury and help reprogram the brain. Yet despite the mounting scientific evidence, music therapy remains unfunded by government health care or corporate benefit programs.