Wednesday, February 11, 2009

Van Morrison revisits astral plane on live `Weeks'

LOS ANGELES -Van Morrison's "Astral Weeks" rests high on critics' lists of all-time best albums. Yet Morrison felt he never quite had the chance to get it right the first time.
So he has taken a second crack at it with "Astral Weeks: Live at the Hollywood Bowl," recorded over two nights last November with musical arrangements closer to what he originally envisioned.
"I didn't do exactly what I wanted to, because I didn't have the support, and I didn't have any money. I mean, basically, I was broke. I had bad management, a bad record company," Morrison, 63, said in a phone interview from London. "I didn't really have the freedom."
Newly signed to Warner Bros. in 1968 after extricating himself from a painful previous record deal, Morrison cut "Astral Weeks" during a handful of studio sessions mostly using jazz musicians with whom he had never worked.
Fans would call the results sublime, an introspective masterpiece blending Morrison's jazz, blues, classical and folk influences. But with its dreamy, freeform structure and half of its eight songs topping seven minutes, "Astral Weeks" confounded an industry built on catchy three-minute singles such as Morrison's earlier hits "Gloria" and "Brown-Eyed Girl."
Morrison said he had no backing for a proper tour to promote the album, which sold only modestly at first.
As Morrison followed with such radio-friendly singles as "Moondance," "Domino" and "Jackie Wilson Said," critics continued to talk up "Astral Weeks," which gradually took on an almost mythical aura.
New fans would discover the album, and audiences still call out for "Cyprus Avenue," "Ballerina" or the title track from "Astral Weeks," songs played here and there when the album first came out but only rarely since.
Morrison decided it was time to pull out those tunes again and play the entire album live, with a full string section.
He enlisted musicians he had worked with before, including guitarist Jay Berliner, who played on the original "Astral Weeks" album. In keeping with the loose studio sessions that produced the original record, Morrison and his collaborators got together only once to rehearse the live concert.
"Not even a rehearsal. Just kind of a run-through. We just ran through a few songs and then did the gig. I'm not a rehearsal-type person," Morrison said. "Everybody was under the right kind of pressure. ... Everybody had to be on their toes and had to be there, had to be totally present. It was done under pressure, but the pressure turned out to be good pressure."
For the live shows, Morrison shuffled the song order. Rather than "Slim Slow Slider," the spare, downbeat number that ends the 1968 album, Morrison closed with the fan favorite, "Madame George."
"I just wanted to finish on an uptempo song," Morrison said. "That has been the most-requested from that album over the years from the audience, the one they want to hear, so that's why we ended on that one."
"Madame George" is emblematic of the album, citing Cyprus Avenue, the grand street of luxurious homes near the working-class Belfast neighborhood where Morrison grew up. The lyrics are cryptic and pensive, relating youthful visions of "kids out in the street collecting bottle tops" or "throwing pennies at the bridges down below."
"Basically, it's short stories, it's fiction, and it means something different to each person who listens to it," Morrison said. "I was writing it from the collective unconscious, what I was picking up at that particular time, in the '60s, late '60s. So I was just picking this stuff up, like, psychically or however you want to put it.
"That's kind of why it's called `Astral Weeks,' you know?" Morrison added with a laugh.
Morrison is following the album, due out Feb. 24 as the first release of his own Listen to the Lion label, with more live performances of "Astral Weeks" in New York in late February and early March.
A concert film of his Hollywood Bowl performances also is planned on DVD this year, and Morrison said he might perform the album at future live shows.
Fans often call "Astral Weeks" a transcendent record, and Morrison used the same word to describe the vibe he felt among the players and audience at the Hollywood Bowl shows.
"We did the songs and took them somewhere else. Transcended the originals, if you know what I mean," Morrison said. "They were so fresh. I could approach it, and I could sort of do it the way I wanted to do it with the orchestration. Because like I said, originally, I couldn't afford the orchestration, so because of that, it was such a bad experience at the time, I sort of buried it in my own mind. ...
"So I guess I just got around to it, brought it out of the box. And why should all these other people be getting all this kind of mileage out of it? I need to be doing this myself. ... For instance, there's been a lot of requests to use the material in movies, so if I can give them my version, my production, rather than Warner Bros., then that's obviously better for me, you know? There's a lot of different sides to this story."

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Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Whitney Houston Is Back, Everyone!

BEVERLY HILLS, Calif. (Feb. 8) -- Whitney Houston's long, storied break from music came to a halt early sunday morning when the icon belted out some classic tunes at a pre-Grammy party for her mentor, Clive Davis.
The Associated Press describes Whitney as "stunning-looking and strong-sounding," during her first stage performance since her fall from grace just a few years ago thanks to drugs, erratic behavior and her wild marriage to Bobby Brown.

"I've got it, I've got it!" Houston, looking glamorous in a skintight leopard dress, sang early Sunday morning as she belted a line from one of her classic hits, "I'm Every Woman." But more than a lyric, it summarized to the crowd of A-list superstars and top industry execs that the superstar was back in top form.
"We all crossed our fingers that her beautiful story would end (happily)," said Jamie Foxx, who stood at the front of the stage and took video of Houston like he was just another fan in the crowd. "This is a new begining."
Houston's mini-concert put an exclamation point on a night that included a rousing performance by Kelly Clarkson, an unlikely but magical duet between Jennifer Hudson and Barry Manilow and a rambling monologue by Kanye West.
"I have to bow in the presence of greats right now," West said as he looked out into the crowd, which at one point included Sir Paul McCartney, Prince, Diddy, Rihanna, the Jonas Brothers, Taylor Swift, Quincy Jones, and other luminaries.
"I'm just humbled by your greatness, and also Clive," West told the audience.
Davis, the music mogul who founded labels, signed greats ranging from Houston to Bruce Springsteen to Janis Joplin, and resuscitated the careers of veterans like Rod Stewart and Carlos Santana, was honored by the Recording Academy as an industry icon on Saturday, hours before Sunday's Grammys. For nearly three decades, Davis' pre-Grammy party and concert had become one of the industry's most coveted invites; this year, the Recording Academy took the event over and honored Davis instead.
But while Davis got an award, he still held court like it was his own party, acting as the evening's host as he introduced performers like Stewart, the Kings of Leon and Leona Lewis.
Diddy got the often staid crowd on their feet with a moving rendition of his tribute to the slain Notorious B.I.G., "I'll Be Missing You," with Biggie's widow, singer Faith Evans, and a gospel choir.

Clarkson got one of the evening's biggest ovations with her performance of her new single, "My Life Would Suck Without You" and the Joplin gem "Piece of My Heart."
But Hudson was perhaps the night's biggest star — until Houston hit the stage. Starting with the Super Bowl last Sunday, Hudson has been raising her profile after spending months in seclusion following the slayings of her mother, brother and nephew last October.
A smiling Houston performed her hit "Spotlight," which earned her one of her four Grammy nominations, and got a standing ovation from the crowd. But she raised the bar with a pairing with Barry Manilow, injecting one of his signature songs, "Weekend in New England," with a lacking ingredient — soul.
Afterward, the Oscar-winner joined the audience (and friend Fantasia), stood in the front and danced and sang as Houston performed. Houston started off with "I Will Always Love You," but didn't hit the high, sustaining notes that made the song such a dramatic, stirring hit. Instead, she kept her voice at medium power, deciding to croon rather than soar.
But as she got into hits like "It's Not Right, But It's O.K.," her voice appeared to get stronger — and louder, and while she never replicated the vocal gymnastics of some of her past work, delivered a mesmerizing performance nonetheless.
The 45-year-old, one of the best-selling artists of all time and among the greatest singers, hasn't made an album since 2002. Then she was was sinking due to drug use and a tumultuous personal life — a far cry from the princess image she cultivated since her debut in the 1980s.
But the singer is expected to release an album sometime this year, and unlike other reported returns, this comeback seems to be the real deal.
"She was on it, she was happy — she's back," said Foxx. "Everybody else watch out."
The Grammys air on Sunday on CBS.

2009 AOL LLC. All Rights Reserved. // Copyright 2008 The Associated Press. // Copyright 2009, Reuters


Grammy weekend kicks off with Neil Diamond tribute

By BETH HARRIS,AP

LOS ANGELES -Jennifer Hudson's stirring vocals on "Holly Holy" and Coldplay's stripped-down version of "I'm A Believer" helped take Neil Diamond on a musical journey of his career.
They joined Foo Fighters, Tim McGraw and many others in launching Grammy weekend with performances honoring the 68-year-old Diamond as MusiCares Person of the Year.
The music industry charity celebrated Diamond for his philanthropy, which included donating concert merchandise sales last fall to relief efforts for Texas areas ravaged by Hurricane Ike.
Surrounded by his children and grandchildren, Diamond listened as more than 50 years of what he called "my little musical creations" were interpreted for 2,200 people at the Los Angeles Convention Center.
"I love you for it," he told the crowd.
The singer-songwriter thanked his mother, Rose, who was in the audience, recalling how his parents bought him a $10 guitar as a youngster in Brooklyn.
"They paid it off a dollar a week for 10 weeks," he said. "It was a good investment, Mom. You invested $10 and made a life for me."
Jonas Brothers kicked off the show with "Forever in Blue Jeans."
"Aren't they adorable?" host Jimmy Kimmel joked. "These kids wouldn't even have sideburns if it weren't for Neil Diamond."
Kid Rock did "Thank the Lord for the Night Time."
Diamond slow-danced with Faith Hill during their duet on "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" and kissed her hand.
He got the crowd on its feet for "America" and kept them there for a singalong finale to "Sweet Caroline." In the audience, comedian Sarah Silverman wrapped her arms around boyfriend Kimmel as they swayed to the music.
In a nod to Diamond's sparkly duds of the '70s, Kimmel told him he was "one of the few Jews who look good in sequins."
The unlikeliest performers were Los Volcanes, a Tejano group from south Texas that did "Red Red Wine."
In a taped piece, Diamond said he found himself chatting with band accordionist Eddie Rodriguez when he misdialed while making a phone call to Pearl Jam singer Eddie Vedder.
Diamond learned that Rodriguez was in a band and had him send a demo tape, leading to the gig.
The group earned a standing ovation.
British singer Adele sang "Cracklin' Rose" while wrapping her heavily bandaged right thumb around the microphone. Chris Cornell offered up "Kentucky Woman," while Raul Malo did Diamond's big hit "Solitary Man."
Cassandra Wilson and trumpeter Terence Blanchard teamed for a jazzy take on "September Morn," Eric Benet crooned "Heartlight" from the movie "E.T." and Tim McGraw sang "Hello Again."

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

M.I.A. says Grammys could be labor intensive

By NATALIE ROTMAN,AP

LOS ANGELES -M.I.A.'s planned performance at the Grammys might be more labor intensive than most.
The pregnant rapper is nominated for two Grammys, including record of the year for her hit "Paper Planes." She could give birth to her first child at any moment. Yet she has agreed to perform during the Grammy telecast, to be aired live on CBS on Sunday.
M.I.A. said she'd been asked to perform with Jay-Z, T.I., Kanye West and Lil Wayne on the Grammy-nominated "Swagga Like Us," which is based on a sample of "Paper Planes."
But in a recent interview, she admitted that she worried such a performance "might induce labor.
"When I read these books on childbirth they are like, 'If you want to induce labor, try having a game of arm wrestle with your friend.' I am like, 'Oh my God, my option isn't an arm wrestle — it's like being onstage and with Jay-Z and Lil Wayne and Kanye and T.I.' To me that is really exciting, to be a nine-month pregnant woman," she said.
M.I.A. has had a lot of excitement already in the past year. Not only is she due to give birth to her child with fiance Benjamin Bronfman and nominated for Grammy awards, she was nominated for an Oscar for her song "O Saya" from "Slumdog Millionaire," which she wrote with A.R. Rahman.
"It was literally like day by day, you know somebody is like 'You have been nominated for a Brit (Award), and then it was like 'You are nominated for an Oscar' and it was like ... I was just really confused by it all," she said.
Besides dealing with all the awards hoopla, the 31-year-old is working on a new album as well as producing her new artist, Rye Rye.
M.I.A. — who says she doesn't know the sex of her baby but calls it "he" anyway — said the baby is already a fan of what it's been hearing.
"Every time I go for an ultra scan the baby is like in crazy positions with legs star-shaped and stuff. It's not like in a baby position at all," she said. "I feel like he is used to base lines and beats and receptive to that, which is cute."

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

List of televised Grammy Awards

By The Associated Press,AP

List of awards presented during Sunday's telecast of the 51st annual Grammys:
Album of the Year: "Raising Sand," Robert Plant and Alison Krauss
Rap Album: "Tha Carter III," Lil Wayne
Male Pop Vocal Performance: "Say," John Mayer
Record of the Year: "Please Read the Letter," Robert Plant and Alison Krauss
New Artist: Adele
Rock Album: "Viva La Vida or Death and All His Friends," Coldplay
Pop Collaboration With Vocals: "Rich Woman," Robert Plant and Alison Krauss
Song of the Year: "Viva La Vida," Guy Berryman, Jonny Buckland, Will Champion and Chris Martin, songwriters (Coldplay)
Country Performance By a Duo orr Group With Vocals: "Stay," Sugarland
R&B Album: "Jennifer Hudson," Jennifer Hudson

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Grammys show Plant, Krauss a whole lotta love

By JAKE COYLE,AP

The 51st annual Grammys was an all-ages affair ultimately dominated by a rock legend who took up with a younger bluegrass singer on a whim.
The unlikely pairing of Robert Plant and Alison Krauss that produced the hit album "Raising Sand" won five Grammys on Sunday including album of the year. The former Led Zeppelin frontman, previously best known for his high-decibel shrieking and rock star theatrics, found more docile Nashville melodies with Krauss.
While accepting the Grammy for album of the year, the 37-year-old Krauss — perhaps wanting to remind the audience that Plant's rock star hadn't entirely matured — said there's "never a dull moment" with the 60-year-old singer.
"Raising Sand," produced by T Bone Burnett, bested fellow nominees Lil Wayne, Ne-Yo, Coldplay and Radiohead. Their "Please Read the Letter" also won record of the year.
"I'm bewildered," said Plant. "In the old days we would have called this selling out, but I think it's a good way to spend a Sunday."
In a performance-stuffed live broadcast on CBS, the subject of age — and intertwining musical realms — was always close at hand.
Taylor Swift, 19, and Miley Cyrus, 16, sang a duet of Swift's "Fifteen." The 66-year-old Paul McCartney, with 40-year-old Dave Grohl on drums, sang the Beatles classic about a girl who "was just 17."
Stevie Wonder performed with the Jonas Brothers and even a nine-months pregnant woman — the rapper M.I.A. — hobbled out on the stage to join the dapperly dressed Jay-Z, Kanye West, Lil Wayne and T.I. in a "rap summit" performance of T.I.'s "Swagger Like Us."
Before the night's end, Plant and Krauss seemed to be in a three-horse race with Lil Wayne and Coldplay — a trio of acts of wildly different sounds.
Lil Wayne — who led the field with eight nominations — won three awards, including best rap album for "Tha Carter III," for which he literally hopped on stage to receive. (His tally came to four Grammys if you count his inclusion on "Swagger Like Us," which won best rap performance by a duo or group.)
Coldplay also took home three awards, including best rock album for "Viva La Vida Or Death And All His Friends."
"We've never had so many Grammys in our life," said lead singer Chris Martin, perhaps so excited he got confused (they had already won four over the years). "We feel so grateful to be here. I'm going to tear up."
The Grammys this year offered a CBS telecast without a host and — unexpectedly — without several performers.
Rihanna and Chris Brown, both nominated for awards and scheduled to perform, were absent after the Los Angeles Police Department announced that Brown — who is dating Rihanna — was the subject of an investigation into a felony domestic violence battery from around 12:30 a.m. Sunday.
Brown turned himself into police late Sunday and was released after posting bail. Police booked the 19-year-old R&B singer on suspicion of making a criminal threat.
To fill in for Rihanna's scheduled performance, the Recording Academy hastily put together an ensemble of Al Green, Justin Timberlake, Boyz II Men and Keith Urban performing Green's "Let's Stay Together."
One of the night's superior performances, it reflected the comments of producer T. Bone Burnett, who explained while accepting the award for record of the year: "Good things happen out of nowhere."
"Things happen; you have to be nimble," said Recording Academy president Neil Portnow after the show, explaining he didn't know of the absences until Sunday afternoon. "We think to ourselves, we've got the greatest musical talent in the world in the same place at the same time."
The broadcast from the Staples Center in Los Angeles sometimes had the appearance of a bubble. No mention was made of economic troubles across the country or of the music industry's continuing declining sales. Though download sales are rising, album sales dropped 14 percent last year.
Even the election of Barack Obama was hardly referred to. Following the inauguration and the Super Bowl, it was just about the only major broadcast of late not to feature Bruce Springsteen, whose "Girls in Their Summer Clothes" won for best rock song.
Besides the expected will.i.am mention of Obama ("congratulations," will.i.am said), Portnow was one of few to mention Obama. He noted musicians had supplied "the soundtrack to history" and that the new president is, after all, a two-time Grammy winner for his readings of his books.
Such awards, though, never make it into the televised broadcast, which this year included awards for only a dozen of the 110 categories.
Among the unseen awards was a posthumous award for George Carlin in the comedy album category for "It's Bad for Ya," a recording of his final HBO comedy special. Al Gore — adding to his extensive awards tally — won for the audio book of his "An Inconvenient Truth."
Instead of focusing on the awards, though, the Recording Academy has increasingly turned the Grammys into an all-star revue, packing the three-and-a-half-hour long show with performance after performance, duet after duet.
Among them: U2 kicking things off with their new single "Get on Your Boots"; Lil Wayne and Allen Toussaint paying tribute to New Orleans; Neil Diamond singing "Sweet Caroline"; Radiohead performing with the University of Southern California marching band; Jay-Z joining Coldplay; a tribute to the Four Tops; and Jennifer Hudson singing a rousing, touching version of "You Pulled Me Through" that left her teary-eyed.
Following the Super Bowl, it was Hudson's second major performance since her mother, brother and nephew were killed in October. Hudson's self-titled disc also won best R&B album.
"I first would like to thank God, who has brought me through," she said accepting the award. "I would like to thank my family in heaven and those who are with me today."
The Grammys also sought to tap into online traffic with official updates on Twitter and Facebook throughout the broadcast.
There were some oddities in the show, too:
Gwyneth Paltrow introduced not the giant British rock group that her husband, Chris Martin, plays in (Coldplay), but the giant British rock band they have often been compared to (Radiohead). Introducing the Al Green performance, Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson curiously declared, "I live for the Grammys." Katy Perry, again singing her hit "I Kissed a Girl," performed a choreographed routine while simultaneously appearing to disdain choreographed routines.
Other notable winners included: Rick Rubin for producer of the year; Adele for best female pop vocal performance ("Chasing Pavements"); Duffy for best pop vocal album ("Rockferry"); Radiohead for best alternative music album ("In Rainbows"); Metallica for best metal performance ("My Apocalypse"); Al Green for best R&B performance by a duo or group with vocals, and best traditional R&B vocal performance; Daft Punk for best dance recording, and best electronic dance album; George Strait for best country album ("Troubadour"); and B.B. King for best traditional blues album ("One Kind Favor").
A complete list of winners is available at http://www.grammy.com.
Following last year's surprise best album winner — Herbie Hancock's Joni Mitchell tribute "River: The Joni Letters" — the Grammys have now picked a folk album for best album a year after choosing a jazz record.
Krauss is the most decorated female artist in Grammy history with 26 awards. Burnett has known Grammy glory before, too, most notably as producer of the best-album winning soundtrack to "O Brother, Where Art Thou?"
Led Zeppelin, which was given a lifetime achievement Grammy in 2005, was never otherwise honored by the Recording Academy.
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A view from the audience at the Grammy awards

By DERRIK J. LANG,AP

LOS ANGELES -The 51st annual Grammy Awards were under way Sunday night. Here's what AP Entertainment Writer Derrik J. Lang was seeing from the audience.
The mood was festive and loose during the pretelecast section of the Grammy Awards at the Los Angeles Convention Center where trophies for such things as best polka album and best new age album are handed out.
Contributing to the looseness could have been the fact participants knew they weren't getting on TV as they accepted their awards from pre-show co-hosts Wayne Brady and Tia Carrere.
Despite pandering to the Grammys by naming her album "For Your Consideration," actress-comedian Kathy Griffin was beaten out in the comedy category by George Carlin, who died last year. Carlin's daughter, Kelly Carlin-McCall, accepted the award and promised to take better care of it than her dad did after he won his first Grammy in 1972. She said her father dismantled that one while in a "chemical-induced state."
Many of the pretelecast winners, including Juanes and Kirk Franklin, are not present, giving many of the winners who are, including Blind Boys of Alabama and Hilary Hahn, ample time to thank everyone.
Uh oh. Terence Blanchard has stepped out of the pretelecast ceremony just before his name is called for jazz instrumental solo. Friends in the audience scream from their seats that he is on his way to the stage.
"'Well, where is he?' presenter Yolanda Adams asks. "On I-10?"
The audience for the pre-telecast isn't exactly packed with household names, but there are a few. While the classical album awards are being handed out, Carrie Underwood and her entourage roll in and camp out in the last row. Only 21 awards to go until her category!
She stuck around! Carrie Underwood wins for female country solo.
"There's no way on this planet that this could ever get old," she says, accepting the trophy.
The pretelecast ceremony is still going on, but the doors to the televised Grammy show next door at the Staples Center have opened.
Not to worry, it's black-tie dress code isn't stopping several attendees from noshing on hot dogs and popcorn in the lobby.
First Celebrity Sighting: beefy mixed martial arts fighter Chuck Liddell going through security.
Dwayne "The Rock" Johnson, Robert Planet, Blind Boys of Alabama and LL Cool J are scrambling to take their seats as U2 opens the show.
Not Trace Adkins, though. He's been sitting in his seat for almost half an hour.
Justin Timberlake, Al Green, Boyz II Men and Keith Urban not only receive a standing ovation, but the crowd is on its feet for their entire performance.
During the first commercial break, stagehands are frantically setting up Coldplay's instruments. A piano for Chris Martin has been wheeled out onto the small circular stage in the middle of the audience.
You can't say Kid Rock can't poke fun at himself. During his performance the mugshot from one of his arrests is flashed on the huge monitors visible to the audience. People laughed harder at that than any of the jokes on the Teleprompter.
They may be in a sea of people, but Miley Cyrus and Taylor Swift suddenly found themselves all alone on stage while waiting to perform. The pair chatted as Swift tuned her guitar. Then, during their first duet, stagehands were erecting a giant banana on stage for another performance.
Attention people watching at home on TV: You are not missing any of the show.
There are no extra special performances inside the Staples Center during commercial breaks. Instead, they are showing videos of past performances on the monitors the audience is watching.
Jennifer Hudson's moving performance brought the crowd to its feet and left her visibly choked up as she mouthed the words "Thank you" to the audience before leaving the stage.
Coldplay broke up! Well, only for a few minutes.
Lead singer Chris Martin went back to his seat after the group won a Grammy for rock album. Meanwhile, the rest of the band was ushered backstage.

Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Grammy Awards get a boost with increased audience

NEW YORK -Music sales may be low, but interest in music isn't, at least according to ratings for the Grammy Awards.
Nielsen Media Research says that Sunday's ceremony was seen by at estimated 19.1 million people. That's about 2 million more viewers than for last year's show and higher than it's been for three of the past four years.
Among young viewers ages 18 to 34, ratings were up 23 percent. The Grammys tried to reach a mixed audience, with a duet featuring teen dreams the Jonas Brothers and Stevie Wonder. Last year's Grammy Awards, with 17.2 million viewers, was the least-watched Grammys since the awards were first televised by CBS in the mid-1970s.
Copyright 2009 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

Paul Stanley of KISS Has First Daughter

(Feb. 10) - KISS frontman Paul Stanley and his wife Erin can expect to 'Rock And Roll All Nite' for the next few months... with their new baby. Stanley and Erin, an attorney, welcomed their first baby girl on January 28, a rep told PEOPLE.

"The KISS Army has a new princess and her name is Sarah Brianna," says Stanley, 57. "Erin and I feel truly blessed with the addition of this Star Child into our lives."
Stanley and his wife married in 2005, and live in Beverly Hills with their son Colin Michael, 2, and Stanley's 14-year-old son from a previous marriage, Evan Shane.
The birth of his daughter precedes another special milestone: this summer, Stanley will join the other members of KISS for a 35-year anniversary tour.

Kanye West 'Devastated' By Rihanna's Alleged Assault

Kanye West says he is "devastated" by reports of Chris Brown's alleged assault on Rihanna. West spoke to Ryan Seacrest on his KIIS-FM radio show Tuesday morning, stating he was "completely devastated by the concept of what I heard." The rapper partied alongside the couple at Clive Davis' pre-Grammy party in L.A. on Saturday, reports UsMagazine.com.

Saturday, January 17, 2009

Amy: 'I Won't Let Him Divorce Me'

(Jan. 17) - Amy Winehouse isn't having it. Although her jailed husband instructed a lawyer to file for divorce, she's not mentally divvying up their stuff. "I still love my Blake. I won't let him divorce me," she tells a British newspaper, according to a PEOPLE report.
Blake Fielder-Civil is serving time for assault and attempting to pervert the course of justice. Even so, Winehouse, 25, said their forced separation doesn't mean she isn't going to have "some fun" and a "good time." She's been seen hanging out in St. Lucia with rugby player-turned-actor Josh Bowman, an interlude she called "a holiday thing" while she waits for "my Blake."

http://www.popeater.com

U2 Reveals New Album Track List

U2 has unveiled the track list for its new album, "No Line on the Horizon," due March 3 from Interscope. The 11-song set is led by the single "Get on Your Boots," which premieres Monday (Jan. 19) on Dublin's 2FM. It will be released digitally Feb. 15 and physically the following day.

The new album blends such classic U2 rockers as "I'll Go Crazy if I Don't Go Crazy Tonight" and "Get on Your Boots" with more experimental fare like the seven-minute "Moment of Surrender" and "Fez -- Being Born." The former is an electro-leaning track with an Eastern-inspired scale in the chorus, making it one of the weirder U2 tracks in decades.

Sources say U2 recorded enough material with producers Daniel Lanois, Brian Eno and Steve Lillywhite for an entire separate album, but it is unknown if any of it will see the light of day.

As previously reported, "No Line on the Horizon" will be available in five different incarnations.
U2 is expected to tour this summer, its first outing since signing a multi-rights deal with Live Nation last March. The group will perform "Get on Your Boots" Feb. 18 at the BRIT Awards ceremony in London.


Here is the track listing for "No Line on the Horizon":

"No Line on the Horizon"
"Magnificent"
"Moment of Surrender"
"Unknown Caller"
"I'll Go Crazy if I Don't Go Crazy Tonight"
"Get On Your Boots"
"Stand Up Comedy"
"Fez -- Being Born"
"White As Snow"
"Breathe"
"Cedars of Lebanon"


http://www.billboard.com

Aerosmith cancel Venezuelan Gig

Aerosmith have cancelled a gig in Venezuela after guitarist Joe Perry developed "unforeseen complications" with his replacement knee.

Perry, 58, had been forced to undergo emergency surgery, a spokeswoman said in a statement.

The veteran rock band were due to headline Solid Fest in Caracas on 1 February in what would have been their first Venezuelan concert.

Singer Steven Tyler said the band hoped "to see everyone there soon".

"Playing Venezuela was my idea of a perfect way to start the New Year," he added in the statement.

"But having heard Joe had to revisit the hospital this month, the band are truly disappointed we can't be in Caracas and we hope to see everyone there soon."Perry had his replacement knee operation last March.

Last May, Tyler has said he had checked into a rehab unit because he needed to find a "safe environment" to recover from foot surgery.

He issued the statement following reports that he had entered a Los Angeles clinic.

Tyler, 60, had problems with drugs and alcohol in the 1970s and 1980s before completing rehabilitation in 1986.

http://news.bbc.co.uk

Mariah Carey & Nick Cannon's Baby-Making Plans

Mariah Carey and Nick Cannon may not be poppin' out babies right now, but it's gonna happen.

"We're definitely into planning a family and stuff but when everything calms down and we get the time," Cannon told me earlier today after finishing up a workout at Gatorade's G Gym at Village at the Yard at Sundance. "We're just running and gunning now and enjoying being newlyweds."

Also on the couple's agenda? Working together! But not on a musical collaboration. So what gives?

"It'll be something more out of fun than serious," Cannon said. "We're going to do some comedy stuff together. You'll see us this year doing some really funny stuff."

Cannon is not only deejaying tonight's House of Hype party for Carey's new movie, Push, but he also has his own flick at Sundance to promote, the indie psycho-thriller The Killing Room.

He plays a young homeless guy opposite Chloƫ Sevigny and Timothy Hutton. "It was my first real chance to be a serious method actor," Cannon said. "I lost like 20 pounds for the role. I didn't eat. I slept outside. I didn't comb my hair for a month. I went into seclusion."

(He's not expecting his wife to dig Killing too much because "she likes fun, lighthearted comedies.")

And after the film festival, it's off to Washington, D.C., for the Inaugural and some big dreams. Cannon laughed, "I want to be the official White House deejay."

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Metallica Discuss Rock Hall Of Fame Induction

There are few other things rock boys and girls love arguing about more than who should or shouldn't be in the Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame. Even real live rock stars like Metallica have opinions about this. The venerated metal band will be part of the induction class of 2009 alongside other bold names like Run-DMC. We caught up with the guys and asked them how it feels to be inducted. We also asked them which artists they would nominate to join them in the Rock Hall. So who did the guys pick? Motorhead, Deep Purple...and Rush.

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