Sunday, November 6, 2011

Jessie J dominates UK's MOBO music awards

LONDON (Reuters) - British singer Jessie J won four MOBO awards on Wednesday, dominating the prizes that celebrate music of black origin.

The 23-year-old, who is white, scooped the Best UK Act, Best Album ("Who You Are"), Best Newcomer and Best Song ("Do it Like a Dude") categories.

She only failed to make it five wins from five nominations at the awards ceremony in Glasgow, Scotland, when Tinchy Stryder and Dappy won the best video prize with the song "Spaceship."

Tinie Tempah won the Best Hip Hop/Grime category, while Adele was named Best R&B/Soul Act.

Rihanna fought off competition from the likes of Beyonce and Bruno Mars to win the Best International Act Award. All winners were voted for by fans via mobo.com and media partner outlets.

Following is the full list of winners:

- Best UK Act - Jessie J

- Best Newcomer - Jessie J

- Best Hip Hop/Grime Act - Tinie Tempah

- Best Video - Tinchy Stryder and Dappy/Spaceship

- Best International Act - Rihanna

- Best Song - Jessie J/Do It Like a Dude

- Best Album - Jessie J/Who You Are

- Best Reggae - Alborosie

- Best Jazz Act - Kairos 4tet

- Best African Act - Wizkid

- Best Gospel Act - Triple O

- Best R&B/Soul Act - Adele

- Outstanding Contribution to Music- Boyz II Men

- BeMOBO Award - Youth Music

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White; Editing by Jill Serjeant)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Saturday, November 5, 2011

Finance whiz and music lover to be Bertelsmann CEO

FRANKFURT (Reuters) - Bertelsmann, Europe's largest media company, said its Chief Financial Officer Thomas Rabe will take over as chief executive at the start of next year, succeeding Hartmut Ostrowski.

Ostrowski, who took the helm in 2008, will take a seat on Bertelsmann's supervisory board, the company said, adding Ostrowski was making the switch for personal reasons.

The move comes as a surprise as Ostrowski's term ran until December 2012, although Bertelsmann -- best known for its TV arm RTL and publisher Random House -- has traditionally decided to extend contracts for top jobs a year before they end.

In March, Ostrowski said he was happy to continue his work until retirement, which at Bertelsmann would have been in seven years, when he turns 60.

It was an open secret that CFO Rabe had been on the lookout to become a CEO at Bertelsmann or elsewhere. But whenever he was in talks to leave, the media group had persuaded him to stick it out at Bertelsmann.

The tall and lanky Rabe, who towers over Ostrowski, had been in talks to lead commercial broadcaster ProSieben, RTL's main rival in Germany, but was persuaded to stay.

Later Rabe was touted as a potential candidate to head German retail group Haniel, but again he ended up staying with Bertelsmann.

"It's high time that he takes on this position," said a person who has worked closely with him but declined to be named.

"All in all he has been a financial officer for 11 years, first at RTL Group then for all of Bertelsmann ... I think he is what the company needs right now," the person said.

Rabe and Ostrowski were known to be at odds partly due to their different styles and personalities, but company sources have said the two had put their differences to rest.

FASTEST GROWING

Ostrowski has spent almost his entire career working for Bertelsmann at the group's headquarters in the small northern German town of Guetersloh, less than 20 kilometers (12 miles) from Bielefeld, where he was born.

He made a name for himself running Bertelsmann's services unit arvato, which became the group's fastest-growing business, branching out from media-related services into call centers, financial clearing houses and mobile services -- setting himself up for the CEO post.

As CEO Ostrowski had been welcomed as stable and dependable, especially during the financial crisis, but he was also seen by some analysts as lacking vision.

Rabe, on the other hand, was born in Luxembourg, worked internationally, speaks several languages and is known to be a sharp, analytical thinker.

"He really goes out and digs in, for example when Bertelsmann ended the music joint venture with Sony, he found a nugget that he could grow," the person said, referring to Bertelsmann music rights publishing arm, which is prospering under Rabe's leadership.

Rabe is known for his love of music having played bass in a punk rock band in his youth. When time permits, he can be seen cycling through Berlin, where he lives part time.

Rabe earned the respect of the Mohn family, which controls the company founded over 175 years ago, when he managed the buyout of Belgian investor GBL.

At Bertelsmann he diligently worked on reducing its mountain of debt to a manageable pile, leaving the group free to again consider acquisitions.

Rabe, 46, previously worked for the EU Commission in Brussels and Germany's Treuhandanstalt, the federal agency that privatized East German enterprises.

"He really is brilliant," a company source said, adding: "I think we are in for an interesting time."

(Editing by David Holmes)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Brad Pitt production raided by Hungarian SWAT team

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Brad Pitt might be gunning for a hit with his upcoming horror drama "World War Z," but the Hungarian government would prefer that he not do it with actual weapons.

According to Us Weekly, a SWAT team from Hungary's anti-terrorism department raided one of the film's production warehouses and confiscated 85 fully functional weapons -- the majority of them assault rifles.

According to the magazine, the weapons bore paperwork indicating that they were non-functional, and it's not yet known who is responsible for the snafu.

The guns were reportedly flown in via private plane Monday. An official for the Hungarian government told Us that they were wrapped in a parcel addressed "from a company to an individual."

No matter who's to blame, Hungary's anti-terrorism unit is taking the matter seriously.

"Guns like these are highly illegal to transport even if they were to be used as stage guns, which hopefully they weren't," Hajdu Janos and Zsolt Bodnar, the director and deputy director of Hungary's anti-terrorist force, told the magazine.

In addition to starring in "World War Z," which chronicles the aftermath of a zombie war, Pitt also serves as a producer on the film.

Matthew Fox co-stars in the project, slated to hit theaters on December 21, 2012.

Neither Paramount Pictures nor Plan B Entertainment, the production company behind "World War Z," immediately responded to TheWrap's request for comment.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Director Von Trier questioned over Hitler remarks

COPENHAGEN (Reuters) - Director Lars Von Trier said he was questioned on Wednesday by Danish police for possibly breaking French law when he joked about Nazis and Hitler at the Cannes film festival in May.

In a statement, the controversial 55-year-old added that he would not make any more public statements or give interviews.

"Due to these serious accusations I have realized that I do not possess the skills to express myself unequivocally and I have therefore decided from this day forth to refrain from all public statements and interviews," he said.

The acclaimed film maker's remarks during a press conference in Cannes prompted the festival to expel him, an unprecedented move that could severely hamper his attempts to finance and make movies in the future.

Documents obtained by Reuters showed that a French court had asked Danish authorities to question Von Trier as part of a preliminary investigation into whether he had incited racial hatred.

It is not believed that he has been charged, although his own statement mentioned "charges made by the prosecution of Grasse in France from August 2011 regarding a possible violation of prohibition in French law against justification of war crimes."

The Danish police spokesman familiar with the issue was not immediately available for comment late on Wednesday.

FALL FROM GRACE

The award-winning director of films like "Breaking the Waves," "Dancer in the Dark" and "Antichrist" had been a favorite in Cannes before his remarks made during a press conference to promote his latest picture "Melancholia."

The apocalyptic vision of the end of the world was warmly received by critics, as was the performance of lead actress Kirsten Dunst. She went on to pick up the best actress prize at the festival's closing ceremony.

Organizers at Cannes, where Von Trier had previously won the top Palme d'Or award, decided to ban him after he jokingly called himself a Nazi and Hitler sympathizer.

His remarks angered Jewish groups, but many festival goers said the punishment was unduly harsh on a director who was apparently speaking in jest and in English, not his first language.

Responding to news of the police questioning, the American Gathering of Holocaust Survivors and their Descendants said they believed that Von Trier's remarks were wrong but not criminal.

"Holocaust survivors were offended by Von Trier's vile and insensitive remarks but do not believe he harbors pro-Nazi sympathies that merit criminal prosecution," said Elan Steinberg, vice president of the group.

"He is guilty of bad taste in the quest for cheap self-promotion and for this he should be condemned and exposed. His lack of concern for the traumatized victims of Nazi brutality is disgraceful.

"Nevertheless, his behavior is more childish than criminal. He should grow up."

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White in London, Nick Vinocur in Paris and Mette Fraende in Copenhagen; writing by Mike Collett-White)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Bjork: New album fuses music, technology, nature

REYKJAVIK, Iceland (AP) — Icelandic star Bjork says her new album fuses the natural world and iPad apps to invent a music genre she calls an "appbox."

"Biophilia" — and a host of applications representing specific tracks on the album — are out Monday, and are meant to immerse listeners in a complete audio-visual experience.

Speaking to AP ahead of the launch, Bjork said she sees "the structure and shapes of songs" during the creative process.

That led her to work with a team of iPad app designers and musicians. She describes the app technology as "more like an accessory," and says many fans will listen to the album in a traditional way.

The beauty of Bjork's homeland is an inspiration. The singer says the link between the environment and music is "effortless and natural."

___

The iPad is made by Apple Inc.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Clooney, Gosling shine in "Ides of March"

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - "Moneyball" pushes the theory that baseball games aren't won by the best players but rather by those who can just consistently get on base. And now comes "The Ides of March" to remind us that nothing in politics -- not ideas, not image, not intelligence -- matters as much as winning elections.

And you really don't want to know the lengths to which people will go to score that victory.

Our guide through the sausage-making hell that is political primary season is Stephen Myers (Ryan Gosling), a hotshot young consultant who's already a seasoned veteran of this world.

While he's generally a cool customer, Stephen is obviously starry-eyed about the campaign of Governor Mike Morris (George Clooney), the kind of liberal dream-candidate who's politically viable only in the movies.

He's an atheist who wants to phase out combustible-engine cars in the next decade, but we're supposed to believe that the GOP thinks Morris is more of a threat in November than his Democratic opponent. So if Dennis Kucinich looked more like George Clooney, he'd be president now?

As Morris and his team, run by Paul (Philip Seymour Hoffman), try to figure out how to curry favor with power broker Sen. Thompson (Jeffrey Wright) without promising him the Secretary of State job, Stephen gets a call to secretly meet with Tom Duffy (Paul Giamatti), the campaign manager for Morris' rival.

If you've seen Beau Willimon's play "Farragut North," on which this film is based, you might have wondered why the trailers completely reveal Stephen and Paul's rendezvous, and the repercussions it has on Stephen's career, when that's essentially the whole story.

But "The Ides of March," written by Clooney and Grant Heslov and Willimon, takes the play as merely the launching pad for a whole other plotline involving Stephen's dalliance with an intern (Evan Rachel Wood) who sets in motion a series of events in which Stephen will learn the hard way how far he -- and Morris -- will go to remain atop the political heap.

While it's not nearly as quotable as "Sweet Smell of Success," "Ides" frequently reminded me of that earlier classic in its portrait of the corrosive nature of power, and the soul-killing acts that people will commit to get or to keep it. We see Stephen as experienced and anything but starry-eyed, but over the course of the tale, his trajectory grows ever more dark and cynical.

Clooney's principal ability as a director is his skill for assembling talented casts and getting their best work, and that's certainly on display here. The actor himself nails the I-feel-your-pain empathy of so many contemporary politicians, and even when he's cornered and squirming, Governor Morris never completely drops the public mask he shows to the cameras.

Gosling reminds us of the dictum that acting is all about listening and reacting -- Stephen is cagey enough to understand the gamesmanship of the most innocent conversation, even if that skill fails him when he needs it most, and we see the negotiations going behind every furrowing of his brow.

Hoffman and Giamatti are two of our most compelling screen actors these days, and I wish they'd gotten more opportunities to face off here, but they're still fascinating in their separate corners. Marisa Tomei feels completely convincing as a New York Times reporter constantly angling for a story, and Jennifer Ehle once again nails a small role (as Mrs. Morris) that makes you remember her as the lights come up. (Ehle is one of the few actresses today so willing to hide herself in her work that I never recognize that it's her until I see her name in the closing credits. And in this day of overexposed celebrity, that's very much a good thing.)

While Clooney brings many strengths to the director's chair, he's not much of a visual stylist. Not that he has to bombard the audience with razzle-dazzle, but a little more attention in this area could certainly liven up a film that too often betrays its stage roots. His most exciting movie to look at, "Confessions of a Dangerous Mind," was also one of his least financially successful, and it would be a pity if that film's failure at the box office scared him away from moving the camera more.

The timing couldn't be better for a movie that reminds us that even the most "trustworthy" of politicians more likely than not sold out a good chunk of their principles at some point or other on their way to high office.

"The Ides of March" knows better than to try and offer any solutions to the current political process, but -- like the Occupy America protests currently unfolding from coast to coast -- sometimes it's enough just to highlight the problems that need fixing.

(Editing by Zorianna Kit)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Ex-Weezer bassist Mikey Welsh found dead in Chicago

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Mikey Welsh, the former bass player for the alternative rock band Weezer, was found dead in a Chicago hotel, a police spokeswoman said on Sunday.

Workers at the Rafaello Hotel found Welsh unresponsive and not breathing when they went to his room on Saturday afternoon after he failed to check out as scheduled, spokeswoman Laura Kubiak said.

Welsh, 40, who left the band a decade ago, had been in Chicago to attend Weezer's appearance at RiotFest on Sunday night, a concert that will go on as scheduled, the band said on its website in notifying fans of his death.

"As sad as it is to think about, we know Mikey would never want the rock stopped on his account -- quite the contrary in fact," the band said.

Welsh left the band in 2001 after a well-publicized nervous breakdown, resurfacing later as an artist and painter.

"His chapter in the Weezer story ... was vital, essential, wild, and amazing," the band said, calling him "a unique talent, a deeply loving friend and father."

Welsh said in a posting on his Facebook page earlier in October that he was looking forward to meeting up with the band in Chicago.

The Cook County Medical Examiner's office conducted an autopsy on Sunday and listed the preliminary results as pending toxicology tests. It sometimes takes two months for the results of toxicology tests.

(Writing by David Bailey. Edited by Peter Bohan)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Evanescence comes together for new, self-titled album

NEW YORK (Reuters) - On their first album in five years, the self-titled "Evanescence," Grammy-winning gothic rock band Evanescence finally sounds like the band it has always wanted to be -- tight, together and mature.

On October 11, Evanescence releases the 12-track collection produced by Nick Raskulinecz, known for his work with Alice in Chains and Foo Fighters. Frontwoman Amy Lee told Reuters the new record is more collaborative than the band's previous two.

"We know how to work together and play off each other's strengths and that is different from our other albums," Lee told Reuters. "It's cool because we do have some life experiences together and there isn't a new member. It feels like a family reunion."

Evanescence burst onto the rock scene with their 2003 smash hit "Fallen," which featured the band's breakthrough single, "Bring Me to Life," followed by the popular "My Immortal" and "Going Under," about the end of a bad relationship. The multi-platinum album earned the band a Best New Artist Grammy nomination, and peaked at No. 3 on the Billboard 200.

Shortly thereafter, the five-member band underwent major changes when co-founder, guitarist and songwriter Ben Moody abruptly left amid creative differences. John LeCompt and Rocky Gray also later went their own ways.

Terry Balsamo replaced Moody and has been the band's lead guitarist and co-songwriter with Lee. Drummer Will Hunt and guitarists Troy McLawhorn and Tim McCord now round out the group, which has had the same lineup since 2007.

Since Evanescence's last album, 2006's multi-platinum, "Open the Door," the members have all matured. The 29 year-old Lee, for one, has married, spent time decorating the New York home she shares with her husband and taken up playing the harp.

The album's name and cover art reinforce a new sense of cohesiveness. The cover, which features only a graphic of the band's name, is the first that is not a solo shot of Lee.

"I've been in a totally different place. I've not been 'the girl in the band,' "said Lee. "I've been writing and living. It was awesome."

RETURN TO SPOTLIGHT

With lyrics like, "remember who you really are" and "stand and face the unknown," the album's booming lead single, "What You Want," is Lee's self-directed pep talk upon her return to the spotlight.

"That song is me talking to myself about not being afraid and coming back to this thing and living the life I was born to live," she said. "Sometimes, it takes a lot to do this. And I do love it very much, but there is always that fear of putting yourself under the microscope."

The single and its accompanying video, guest-starring 200 real Evanescence fans, has been warmly received.

MTV.com's James Montgomery called "What You Want" "a song that's powerful enough to shake rock radio to its very foundation" and the video has been watched almost 2.5 million times on YouTube.

"It's great to know we still have so many great fans. They've been through a lot with us," said Lee.

The band has kept fans in mind even while trying out different sounds, such as the affecting "Lost in Paradise," one of Lee's favorites. "So many of our songs say, 'we're strong' 'we're a rock band' but 'Lost in Paradise' is extremely raw and real and broken -- I love that about it."

Loyalists will find familiar songs like "Oceans" and "End of the Dream" with light vocals from Lee.

And the singer is quick to reassure followers that even "with all the growth and experimentation, we didn't betray what the fans want. It's still an Evanescence record."

The band kicks off a 15-city tour The Pretty Reckless and Rival Sons in Oakland on October 10 and makes stops in Dallas and Chicago before wrapping in New York on November 1.

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

"Nemo", "Little Mermaid" swim back to big screen in 3D

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Hot on the heels of the box office success of "The Lion King 3D," Disney and Pixar are reviving four of their classic animated films in 3D versions for movie theaters.

Banking on the success of "The Lion King 3D," which is set to cross the $80 million U.S. box office threshold on Tuesday, the movie studio said it would release a 3D version of 1991 fairytale "Beauty and the Beast" in January 2012 for a limited run in movie theaters.

It will be followed by Pixar's sea-adventure "Finding Nemo" in September 2012, "Monsters, Inc." in January 2013 and the classic 1989 Disney romance "The Little Mermaid" in September 2013.

"Great stories and great characters are timeless, and at Disney we're fortunate to have a treasure trove of both," said Alan Bergman, president, The Walt Disney Studios.

"We're thrilled to give audiences of all ages the chance to experience these beloved tales in an exciting new way with 3D - and in the case of younger generations, for the first time on the big screen," Bergman said in a statement.

Since 1994, "The Lion King" has earned some $883 million at the worldwide box office, including recent sales from the 3D version of the beloved tale of the African animal kingdom.

Disney's "Beauty and the Beast" and "The Little Mermaid" have so far earned $380 million and $228 million worldwide respectively.

Pixar's 2001 hit "Monsters, Inc." made $526 million worldwide and the 2003 Oscar-winning film "Finding Nemo" made more than $867 million.

(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Jill Serjeant)

(This story was corrected in 6th paragraph to fix the global box office figure for "Lion King")


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Band lambasts Britain's Tories for using its song

LONDON (Reuters) - As if unpopular austerity measures and Europe's debt crisis were not enough, Britain's ruling Conservative Party now has an angry band to deal with.

Scottish rockers Primal Scream have labeled as "sick" the use of their hit track "Rocks" during the Tory Party conference in Manchester this week.

The song was played at the end of a speech by Home Secretary (interior minister) Theresa May, a choice seen by the group as odd given the lyrics.

The refrain features the lines "Get your rocks off/Get your rocks off, honey" and the first verse opens: "Dealers keep dealin'/Thieves keep thievin'/Whores keep whorin'/Junkies keep scorin'".

"Primal Scream are totally disgusted that the Home Secretary Theresa May ended her speech at the Tory party conference with our song 'Rocks'," the band said in a statement.

"How inappropriate. Didn't they research the political history of our band? Hasn't she listened to the words? Does she even know what getting your rocks off means? No. She is a Tory; how could she?"

The band went on to explain it was "totally opposed to the coalition government" comprising the Conservatives and Liberal Democrats.

"They are legalized bullies passing new laws to ensure the wealthy stay wealthy, taking the side of big business while eradicating workers' rights and continuing their attacks on young people.

"We would like to distance ourselves from this sick association.

"The Tories are waging a war on the disenfranchised, they are the enemy."

Last year, another band, Keane, said it was "horrified" that the Conservatives had played its song "Everybody's Changing" at a conference, while the opposition Labour Party were criticized by James singer Tim Booth for using "Sit Down" in 2008.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Friday, November 4, 2011

Adele leads American Music Award nominees with 4

Adele has the year's most popular album with "21," so it makes sense that she's the most nominated artist for this year's American Music Awards.

The nominees were announced Tuesday in Los Angeles, and Adele led all nominees with four. The British soul singer and songwriter was nominated for artist of the year, favorite female artist, favorite adult contemporary artist and favorite album for "21."

Taylor Swift, Lady Gaga, Lil Wayne, Katy Perry, Rihanna and The Band Perry all trailed Adele closely with three nominations each. Lil Wayne, Swift, Perry and Lady Gaga are all competing with Adele in the artist of the year category.

The 39th annual American Music Awards will be held Nov. 20 at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles. It will air live on ABC.

___

Online:

http://ama.abc.com


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Hundreds see K-Pop star Rain start military service

SEOUL (Reuters) - Hundreds of weeping and cheering fans from China, Japan and Malaysia gathered at a military base outside the South Korean capital of Seoul on Tuesday to bid farewell to Korean pop-star Rain as he signed up for military service.

Jung Ji-hoon, known by his stage name Rain, is part of the "Korean Wave" of drama and popular music that has taken Asia by storm over the past decade and his third album, "It's Raining," sold a million copies in Asia after its release in 2004.

"It is so sad that Mr Rain will be gone for two years," said Sachiko, a weeping Japanese fan who came to Korea for Rain's last concert and to witness his enlistment.

"I am sure all his fans back in Japan would have wanted to be here today. So we want to make sure we see him off properly."

As well as music, Rain has built a career in film and began his Hollywood career as a minor character in Wachowski Brother's "Speed Racer." He was cast as the lead actor for his second Hollywood film, "Ninja Assassin," which won him the "Biggest Badass" award from MTV.

The three-times winner of TIME magazine's annual 'TIME 100 Poll' in 2006, 2007 and 2011 will undertake 21 months of compulsory military service in the South Korean armed forces.

"Thank you for loving me so much for the past 10 years. Goodbye and I'll be back," Rain told his fans.

Korean drama heart-throb Hyun Bin, best known for his role in the drama "Secret Garden," attracted thousands of fans when he signed up for military service this year.

The 28-year-old won a sharpshooter badge and was posted to an island on the tense border with North Korea, which remains technically at war with the South after the Korean War ended in 1953 with an armistice.

(Editing by David Chance and Sugita Katyal)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

16 zombie actors injured on 'Resident Evil' set

TORONTO (AP) — Sixteen actors dressed as zombies were injured Tuesday when they fell from a platform during filming of a new movie in the "Resident Evil" series, officials said.

Toronto emergency medical spokesman Peter Macintyre said the victims' costumes made it difficult at first for crews to assess the severity of their injuries.

Paramedics responded to the call from Cinespace Film Studios around 8 a.m. to find what appeared — thanks to Hollywood special effects makeup — to be people who had suffered some untold catastrophe.

"I could see the look on the first paramedic, saying 'Oh my God,'" Toronto emergency medical services Commander David Ralph said with a laugh.

Toronto Police Sgt. Andrew Gibson said responders quickly figured out which zombies were injured and which were just in character. "It did kind of catch us off guard when we walked in," he said.

As it turned out, the victims had suffered leg, back and arm injuries. Twelve were taken to a hospital. Officials said none of the injuries are considered life-threatening.

Police Constable Tony Vella said the actors had been filming a scene on a high wheeled platform. The platform moved as they were going to another platform, leaving a gap into which the zombies fell.

Cinespace Film Studios did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

"Resident Evil: Retribution" is the fifth installment of a franchise based on the popular video game series and will be distributed by Screen Gems and Sony Pictures.

Lead actress Milla Jovovich was not on set at the time of the accident, according to her representative Christine Tripicchio.

Vella said the incident is classified as an industrial accident. Canada's Ministry of Labor is investigating.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Rdio extends free trial period for music plan

LOS ANGELES (AP) — Music startup Rdio has joined several competitors in a crowded field of all-you-can-listen services by taking the time limit off its free trial.

The trial had been limited to seven days, and those wanting to continue had to pay for a subscription.

The new plan will give people using computers several months' worth of free listening to any track they want out of a library of 12 million songs. Mobile device users will still have seven days of free listening before being asked to pay.

Rdio, whose backers include Skype co-founder Janus Friis, is offering the trial without ads.

CEO Drew Larner said the amount of free listening on computers will be dynamic and based on individual use patterns. A full mobile subscription plan costs $10 per month, while a computer-based one costs half that.

If people don't start paying after their free listening ends, they can return in about a month for more free use.

Competitors Spotify and Rhapsody offer similar free trials but use audio and display ads to help pay for royalties that the companies must pay on the music.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Jackson tribute show goes on despite setbacks

LONDON (Reuters) - A Michael Jackson tribute concert will go ahead this weekend in Wales despite squabbling among the late singer's siblings, a backlash from fans, a headline act withdrawing at late notice and tickets still unsold.

Chris Hunt, head of Global Live Events which is staging the Saturday "Michael Forever" gig in Cardiff, admitted that preparations had been challenging, but blamed "misinformation" for some of the negative headlines.

"I've never been in a situation in my entire career like it where so many false rumors emerged as if from nowhere," Hunt told Reuters in a telephone interview.

He denied reports that the promoters had fallen out with Jackson's estate and said that any large family like that of the "King of Pop" was bound to have disagreements, particularly one that lived in the bright media glare.

"It's going to be a huge and spectacular event," Hunt said of the gig at the Millennium Stadium, where there will be room for over 60,000 people.

Taking part in the concert will be Jackson's brothers Marlon, Tito and Jackie and his sister La Toya, who will be performing live in public for the first time in nearly 20 years.

Also expected to be present are his mother Katherine, three children and several other close family members.

Brothers Jermaine and Randy, however, criticized the tribute because it coincided with the involuntary manslaughter trial in Los Angeles of Jackson's doctor. Janet Jackson has declined to take part citing the same reason.

The "Thriller" singer, one of the most successful yet troubled artists of the pop era, died in 2009 aged 50 while rehearsing for a series of comeback concerts.

Experts on the Jacksons said such rifts were common in the famous family, but would do nothing to enhance the standing of the tribute concert in the eyes of the public.

But Hunt played down their significance.

"If you can get any family of that size to agree about everything then it's a wonderful day. We've got nearly all the family here," he said.

"A couple of them decided they didn't want to do it and they cited a reason which, to my mind, and indeed to most of the rest of the family, has no logic to it whatever."

LINEUP HICCUPS, ANGRY FANS

Divisions in the family have not been the only hurdle for Hunt and his team.

In September, some fan websites protested over reports that ticket prices had been slashed in a 2-for-1 offer that did not apply to those already purchased.

A month earlier, a group of 35 fan clubs had lobbied for the concert to be canceled due to concerns ranging from confusion over charitable donations to its timing.

Hunt said a portion of the profits would go to two charities with links to Michael Jackson -- the AIDS Project Los Angeles and Prince's Trust -- as well as a trust fund for the singer's children.

"Not all the money goes there (to charity) because we have investors and they would like to get their money back, and if they get a little bit more than their money back they would be delighted," he explained.

"I don't think it's going to do beyond that."

Some commentators said that, despite contributions to charity, the Jackson family stood to benefit financially, a point some fans might find distasteful.

"This (concert) is something they could have done a little bit later when it (the trial) was over with or even before this started," Stacy Brown, a journalist and Michael Jackson biographer, told Reuters.

"This is not about charity. This is about lining the bank accounts of the Jackson family."

Hunt said he was "happy" with ticket sales, although he did not have precise numbers, and that they had picked up "hugely" in recent days.

Wednesday's announcement that the Black Eyed Peas were withdrawing had not dented demand for tickets, he added, although they were arguably the biggest act on the bill.

In addition to Jackson family members, the lineup includes Christina Aguilera, Cee Lo Green, Gladys Knight and Smokey Robinson, and among British stars appearing will be Leona Lewis, Alexandra Burke, JLS and Diversity.

Beyonce will appear in a video performance.

"This is a Jackson family evening," Hunt said. "I think it's easy to underestimate this. I think it will be a hugely emotional evening. Mrs Jackson and the children will be very visible."

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Supreme Court rejects Internet music download case

(Reuters) - The Supreme Court let stand on Monday a ruling that a traditional Internet download of sound recording does not constitute a public performance of the recorded musical work under federal copyright law.

The justices refused to review a ruling by an appeals court in New York that the download itself of a musical work does not fall within the law's definition of a public performance of that work.

The not-for-profit American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers (ASCAP) appealed to the Supreme Court. It said the ruling has profound implications for the nation's music industry, costing its members tens of millions of dollars in potential royalties each year.

ASCAP says more than 390,000 composers, songwriters, lyricists and music publishers in the United States exclusively license their music through the organization. It licenses nearly half of all of the musical works played online, according to the court record in the case.

The federal government opposed the appeal. U.S. Solicitor General Donald Verrilli said the appeals court's ruling was correct and comported with common understanding and sound copyright policy.

ASCAP argued that digital downloads were also public performances for which the copyright owners must be compensated. But a federal judge and the appeals court rejected that argument.

At issue was a section of the Copyright Act stating that to perform a work means to recite, render, play, dance or act it either directly or by means of any device or process.

"Music is neither recited, rendered, nor played when a recording (electronic or otherwise) is simply delivered to a potential listener," the appeals court ruled.

Verrilli agreed. He said that the downloading itself was not a performance of the work and the musical work was not played during the transfer.

Washington attorney Theodore Olson, a Bush administration solicitor general, represented ASCAP in the appeal.

He said the appeals court ruling improperly narrowed the right to perform copyrighted musical works publicly and placed the United States in violation of intellectual property treaties and other international agreements.

The Supreme Court denied the appeal without comment.

The appeals court also ruled that fees paid by Yahoo Inc and RealNetworks Inc for licenses to play music on the Internet should be recalculated. That part of the ruling was not at issue before the Supreme Court.

The Supreme Court case is ASCAP v. United States, No. 10-1337.

(Reporting by James Vicini, Editing by Maureen Bavdek)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

iTunes great for Apple, but was it for music biz?

NEW YORK (AP) — When Apple rolled out iTunes for the masses in the spring of 2003, the music industry was at a point of transition — and chaos.

Entering the new millennium, albums were enjoying blockbuster sales of several million units for its superstar artists, and profits were booming. Yet the threat of Napster and other forms of illegal downloading threatened to eviscerate those profits as many music fans were starting to get used to the idea that music, and loads of it, could be free.

Apple's iTunes entered into that landscape with a concept that wasn't exactly new: a system where you could pay for songs online. Yet iTunes, with its simple interface, its simple concept — 99 cents per song — and revolutionary MP3 device, the iPod, made it the golden standard.

The entry of Apple and its leader, Steve Jobs, who died Wednesday, into the music world was more than a success — it was a phenomenon. Today, iTunes is the largest music retailer, has redefined the listening experience and has largely become the way that music is consumed.

What's less clear is how much the music industry — which is continuing to decline — has benefited. Even today, consensus is mixed.

"It really did remind an entire industry, and gave a cue to even a culture beyond the industry that if you provided music in a convenient, direct way and responded to the consumers' interest and demands, they would in fact buy it, especially if it was priced appropriately," said James Diener, CEO and President of A&M/Octone Records.

"It forced change in a positive way. People who are critical of what iTunes may have done perhaps have short memories and don't realize that the alternative at the time was that an enormous amount of music was leaking onto the Internet and being consumed for free," Diener added. "The alternative was to inspire people to buy music, and to go to a digital retail site. ... That was a remarkable step forward."

Apple introduced iTunes in 2001, a few months before it would release the now-ubiquitous iPod (which begat the iPod Nano, the iPhone, the iPad). At the time, it was not a music store but a rip-and-burn library service only available for Mac users. It initially was viewed with great skepticism by record companies for its ability to make digital copies of music — something the industry thought would lead to piracy.

The industry had a lot to protect. It was enjoying booming sales at the turn of the last century, fueled by the success of teen sensations like Britney Spears, the Backstreet Boys and 'N Sync. But it was just starting to feel the effects of the illegal downloading era: The top-selling album of that year, Linkin Park's "Hybrid Theory," sold 4.8 million, down from 2000's top-seller, 'N Sync's "No Strings Attached," which sold almost 8 million a year before.

"That was at the same time we were confronting Napster, we were confronting the beginnings of the global piracy epidemic that was to come," said Jim Donio, president of the National Association of Recording Merchandisers, or NARM.

"At the same moment of time, we were also experiencing the biggest weekly sales of all time. It was a very odd confluence of events, because you had the harbinger of immense challenges, but at the same time, reaping the rewards of incredible record breaking physical sales. ... It was heated, it was tense."

When Apple's iTunes became a full-service online music store in 2003, it offered more than 200,000 songs that could be loaded on your iPod and fully portable, all for 99 cents a download, no matter who the artist was (in recent years, it has allowed for more variation, with some singles now costing $1.29 per song).

Bill Werde, editorial director at Billboard, said that while other services were available at the time, the genius of Jobs was making iTunes the ultimate consumer destination.

"He created the retail experience that most people know now. He focused on the fan, he focused on the user experience, he didn't focus on rights and complicated pricing schemes. He focused just on what would be simple and what would be easy for a music fan to do, and what would be good for a music fan to experience," Werde said.

"You look around today, we sell tens of millions of digital tracks each year," he continued. "Given that Apple has an 80 percent, 70 percent market share in that digital space when it comes to downloads, you really see how important Apple has become in selling music to music fans."

Apple set the pricing, to the chagrin of the music industry, promoting parity for singles and albums.

"If you walked into a physical record store prior to iTunes ... there was more confusion about what the value of what certain records were worth. You'd see one record that was a brand new release marked at $17.98, and then another one right next to it for $13.98, so there was a lot of clarity for iTunes," Diener said. "I think what iTunes did, which was wise on their part and difficult necessarily for the industry to appreciate at first, was they just standardized all the pricing. ... That was growing pains for the industry because they were used to having more control of the pricing of their products."

Diener believes that price standardization was one of the key reasons for iTunes' success. But while iTunes was booming, the era also hastened the demise of traditional retail stores like Tower and Virgin. No longer did rabid fans need to form a line in front of a music store to get their favorite album, then play it once they got home; They could order it at home and listen instantaneously.

They also didn't have the buy the whole album: iTunes ushered in the era of the singles artists. Cherry-picking songs from albums has become the norm, and some artists have complained that iTunes led to the diminishment of the album.

"I don't disagree with some of that criticism," Diener said. "By unbundling the album and allowing consumers to buy songs one at a time, it changed the whole nature of consumer thinking of what is the basic unit of music — is it an album or is it a single?"

But Werde says Napster and other forms of illegal downloading already had started that process in motion.

"I don't think that iTunes unbundled the album, but I think Apple sort of benefited from this eco-system that certainly supported the single," he said. "Really, it's the music fan that unbundled the album, by all of these fans clearly responding to this amazing new way to experience their music. I mean, the shuffle button? I think the shuffle button may have single-handedly changed the musical horizon of 50 percent of the world."

In 2010, iTunes marked the sale of its 10 billionth song. Even longtime stalwarts have come to embrace iTunes: The Beatles' catalog finally became available late last year. Paul McCartney considered Jobs a friend and called him "a great creative artist" and a music lover.

Yet for all of iTunes' success, the music industry is still floundering. While sales are up slightly this year, the industry has been on a dramatic decline for the past decade, as labels have been shuttered and thousands of jobs lost as it continues to contract. While digital downloads continue to explode, overall album sales have dropped by at least half.

"Steve Jobs leaves behind a little bit of a complex legacy," Werde said.

"He helped create what we think of today as the legal digital music market, which is a substantial music market around the world. But at the same time, the music business in the retail space is probably worth about half of what it was worth ten years ago, so I don't know that anyone saved the music business," he said. "No one has yet solved the problem that music can still be free."

___

Nekesa Mumbi Moody is the music editor for the AP. Follow her at http://www.twitter.com/nekesamumbi


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Thursday, November 3, 2011

Michael Jackson's legacy survives odd trial revelations

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - In the final weeks of his life, Michael Jackson slept with a toy doll on his bed, was so heavily drugged that he sometimes slurred his speech and his big comeback tour was plagued with problems.

That was the picture that has emerged of the King of Pop's private life during the first two weeks of the manslaughter trial of Jackson's in-house physician, Dr. Conrad Murray.

As bizarre as some of the revelations might be, they may add to Jackson's legacy as a genius whose stature has risen since his death in June 2009 at age 50, pop culture experts said.

Jackson's odd, sometimes pathetic demeanor -- largely forgotten in the worldwide grief over his death but on display again during Murray's televised trial -- may make him even more beloved by his fans.

"Lets face it, we're interested in this case because it is about Michael Jackson," said Bob Thompson, a professor of pop culture at Syracuse University.

"But the fact that he is gone also considerably changes how people perceive and emotionally engage in this kind of thing. The dead are the ultimate underdogs," Thompson said.

The most dramatic development in the trial so far has been a recording played for jurors in which Jackson speaks almost incoherently and slurs his words.

Prosecutors say Murray made the recording after giving Jackson a drug treatment as a sleep aid. Medical examiners found the singer's death resulted from an overdose of the anesthetic propofol combined with sedatives.

"I think that has introduced an element of pathos to Michael Jackson," Thompson said. "That slurred speech, he was saying, 'I was deprived of my childhood. I want my money to go to a children's hospital.' How do you argue with something like that?"

DOLLS AND BABIES

When prosecutors showed the jury a photo of a doll on the bed where Jackson's lifeless body was found hooked up to an IV, it made headlines.

Photos of Jackson's bedroom show he had several pictures and a poster of babies. The singer, who often said he was drawn to children because he never had a childhood himself, was tried and acquitted in 2005 of molesting a young boy.

Stacy Brown, co-author of a book called "Michael Jackson: The Man Behind the Mask," said the singer had collected dolls for years and had many at his Neverland Ranch in central California, where he also had theme park rides and a zoo.

"In the grand scheme of things, especially as it relates to him, I don't find it to be odd to have that doll there," Brown said. "If anything, I would expect there to be more."

But for Jackson's fans, a more disturbing revelation may be that the perfectionist "Thriller" singer appeared to be struggling during the strenuous preparations for his sold-out, 50-date London comeback tour -- his first for 12 years.

Jackson missed rehearsals in Los Angeles and those close to him had concerns about his health a week before he died. Tour director Kenny Ortega testified that on June 19, Jackson was too weak to rehearse and that he needed psychological help.

Brown said the picture of Jackson painted at trial "has only added to what's been going on since his death.

"And that is his image has been rehabilitated -- something that he might not have been able to do had he been alive."

(Editing by Jill Serjeant)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Day after wedding, McCartney announces tour dates

LONDON (Reuters) - The day after he tied the knot with American heiress Nancy Shevell, ex-Beatle Paul McCartney announced 11 extra dates for his "On the Run" tour ending in his native town of Liverpool, England, on December 20.

His third marriage looks unlikely to slow the 69-year-old down, with his first ever gig in the UAE on November 13 to coincide with the Abu Dhabi Formula 1 race.

McCartney then travels to Italy, France and Germany, heads back to Britain for a night at London's O2 Arena on December 5, takes in Sweden, Finland and Russia before ending the year with a concert in Manchester on December 19 and Liverpool the next day.

"Playing live is one of the most exciting parts of my job," the musician said in a statement released Monday.

"My audiences seem to get better each year and the band and I love the buzz and feedback that they give us. I can't wait to see you all for some wild nights of rock n' roll and partying."

McCartney married Shevell, 51, Sunday in London and the newlyweds celebrated with a low-key reception at his home in the city.

The "Hey Jude" singer also recently unveiled his first ever ballet score, "Ocean's Kingdom," in New York.

(Reporting by Mike Collett-White, editing by Paul Casciato)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Czech quartet scoops top classical award

LONDON (Reuters) - The Pavel Haas Quartet won "recording of the year" at an awards ceremony held by Britain's Gramophone magazine on Thursday for a CD of Dvorak quartets the group said was inspired by the spirit of the Czech composer.

British mezzo soprano Dame Janet Baker got a lifetime achievement award.

"This is the biggest award you can get in classical music," an overjoyed Peter Jarusek, the quartet's cellist, said. "It is a big surprise."

He added that the quartet's performances of Dvorak's Quartets No. 12 ("American") and No. 13 in the Dvorak Hall of Prague's Rudolfinium concert venue had given the recordings for the Czech Supraphon label a special quality.

"It was really inspiring," he told Reuters. "You could imagine that Dvorak was there. When we recorded these pieces, he was there as well."

Dame Janet, 78 and retired from the opera stage since 1989, said she was thrilled to receive the recognition for a career in opera that made her one of the best known singers on the opera stage, and is preserved in still popular recordings of works like Elgar's "Dream of Gerontius" oratorio or her performances of Britten, Berlioz and Mahler.

People are still listening to her recordings, she said, "makes you feel as though you are still part of the profession...the memory of you is still in people's minds."

"It is a strange thing, but because they can still hear recordings of you, they think you are still doing it -- so they can make a connection," she said.

She added that she would only recommend a career in music to people who are so sure of themselves that "they don't need encouragement" and she said, of her northern England Yorkshire roots, that "I think they've kept me sane."

The awards ceremony, akin to a classical-music-only version of the recording industry's Grammy awards, drew hundreds of musicians, composers and people involved or interested in the music world to a midtown London hotel for a three-hour lunch that included brief excerpts of many of the award-winning recordings and DVDs.

The magazine's Artist of the Year award went to Venezuelan conductor Gustavo Dudamel, who sent in a video clip from Los Angeles to express his appreciation, but one of those who turned up, and played, was 28-year-old Montenegrin guitarist Milos Karadaglic, whose recording of classical guitar standards has been top of the specialist classical chart for months.

"It's amazing," Karadaglic said. "When I fell in love with the guitar I wanted to share this passion with lots of people. And I thought to do that first in Montenegro and then I came to London and then when I came to London I saw this big world and I said I want to belong to this big world, with my guitar.

"So the fact that this is my first CD and my guitar has managed to reach so many people makes my dream come true."

Gramophone editor James Jolly, who served as host of the ceremony along with British soprano Susan Bullock, said that 200 new CD releases a month gave the lie to the suggestion that the classical music world is dying out.

"The ever-expanding range of music on offer...means there are always new boundaries to explore and we can safely say that we have never had it so good," Jolly said.

Other winning recordings were as follows:

Editor's Choice: Rossini "Stabat Mater" with Anna Netrebko and Joyce DiDonato, with the Santa Cecilia Chorus and Orchestra, Antonio Pappano conducting (EMI)

Baroque Instrumental: CPE Bach Harpsichord Concertos, Andreas Staier, Freiburg Baroque Orchestra, Mullejans (Harmonia Mundi)

Baroque Vocal: Handel "Apollo e Dafne," La Risonanza (Glossa)

Choral: Elgar "The Kingdom," Halle Orchestra, Sir Mark Elder (Halle)

Concerto: Debussy, Ravel, Massenet, Jean-Efflam Bavouzet, BBC Symphony Orchestra, Tortellier (Chandos)

Contemporary: Harrison Birtwistle "Night's Black Bird," Halle Orchestra, Ryan Wigglesworth (NMC)

DVD Documentary: "Carlos Kleiber: Traces to Nowhere," Eric Schultz (Arthaus)

DVD Performance: Verdi "Don Carlo," Villazon, Poplovskaya, Keenlyside, Pappano (EMI)

Early Music: Striggio Mass in 40 Parts, I Fagiolini, Robert Hollingworthy (Decca)

Historic: Mahler/Cooke: Symphony No. 10, Philharmonia, LSO, Berthold Goldschmidt (Testament)

Instrumental: Brahms Handel Variations, Murray Perahia (Sony Classical)

Opera: Rossini "Ermione" Geoffrey Mitchell Choir, London Philharmonic Orchestra, David Parry (Opera Rara)

Orchestral: Shostakovich: Symphony No. 10, RLPO, Vassily Petrenko (Naxos)

Recital: Verismo Arias, Jonas Kaufmann, Santa Cecilia, Pappano (Decca)

Solo Vocal: Britten Songs "Songs and Proverbs of William Blake," Gerald Finley, Julius Drake (Hyperion)

Other awards were given to Wigmore Hall for its live recording label, Sir John Eliot Gardiner for his recording of Bach cantatas and The Cobweb Orchestra as an outreach ensemble dedicated to getting people to dust off their instruments and start playing again.

(Writing by Michael Roddy, editing by Paul Casciato)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Rhapsody snaps up Napster to build market share

(Reuters) - Two of the longest-running names in digital music, Rhapsody and Napster, are combining in a bid to grow market share and stay ahead of newer rivals like Spotify, Rdio and MOG.

Rhapsody, which is the largest U.S. digital music service with 800,000 subscribers, said Monday it would take over Napster, which is currently owned by retailer Best Buy Co Inc. Best Buy would receive a minority stake in Rhapsody on closing of the transaction, which is expected around November 30. The deal is stock based, but specific terms were not disclosed.

Even as music sales have dropped significantly over the last decade -- with fans buying fewer CDs and piracy taking hold -- many start-ups and investors have been willing to place a bet on being the music retail or distribution outlet of choice for the 21st Century. But to date, digital music sales has been dominated by Apple Inc's iTunes Music Store.

Napster's name is synonymous with the original "bete noire" of the music industry -- an illegal free music-sharing application founded by college dropout Shawn Fanning in the late 1990s.

Roxio Inc bought the Napster name in 2002 after the original Napster was shuttered by major music labels' lawsuits. It was later sold to Best Buy for $121 million in 2008, and is estimated to have less than 400,000 subscribers. Rhapsody described Napster as the second-largest U.S. digital music service but did not reveal how many subscribers Napster has.

"This deal will further extend Rhapsody's lead over our competitors in the growing on-demand music market," said Rhapsody President Jon Irwin in a statement.

Rhapsody was spun off by Viacom Inc's MTV Networks and RealNetworks Inc early in 2010.

While Rhapsody is the current digital music service market leader, it is facing fast-growing competition from London-based Spotify which launched in the U.S. in July. The new service, which already has some 2 million paying subscribers mainly in Europe, is said to be adding thousands of U.S. users weekly, according to various industry estimates.

(Reporting by Yinka Adegoke in New York, editing by Gerald E. McCormick)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Asia's moviemakers embrace 3D revolution

A 3D horror movie set in a public toilet block is part of a revolution underway in the Asian film industry as low-budget 3D productions take on the big studios at their own game.

At the 16th Busan International Film Festival (BIFF), audiences have been lining up to see the likes of multi-million dollar 3D productions "The Three Musketeers" and the re-imaged version of the local monster hit "The Host".

But theres also been a groundswell of support for two debut features that use the same cutting edge digital technology to help entertain at a fraction of the price.

"Budget doesnt matter, it is story that matters in cinema and its the same when you are using 3D," said South Korean Choo Sang-rok, director of the 3D feature "Persimmon."

Choos edgy horror movie, which had its world premiere at BIFF -- Asia's largest film festival, was shot on a budget of around US$2 million.

And while the James Cameron-directed extravaganza "Avatar" with an estimated budget of US$300 million may have awoken the world to what can be achieved with 3D technology, Choo has opted for a far more modest production.

For starters, the film is shot mostly inside a public toilet block.

"Persimmon" follows the fortunes of five people who become trapped inside the toilet block and are left at the mercy of the ghost who has lured them inside.

The director says it is based on a common urban myth in Korea and it was the confined space in which it is set that first made him think of using 3D.

"Technically, when you are working with 3D it is better to work in a deep and narrow space rather than a wide open space so it is a medium that suits this story," said Choo.

"I think 3D, in my film, brings the audience into the film. It makes them feel what the actors feel. And you dont need to have a big budget to do that. I wanted them to feel they were trapped in the bathroom with the actors."

Choo believes advances in digital technology are expanding the filmmaking landscape for smaller productions as much as they are for the major blockbusters and that there is an audience out there for both.

"The biggest attraction is it takes you from movies you watch to movies you actually experience," he said. "The spectators can actually participate in the movie as well.

"You dont have to focus on the budget. You can focus on getting the audience involved in the movie and thats why the future of low budget 3D movies is looking good."

Veteran Chinese filmmaker Tsui Hark has also been in Busan to collect the Asian Filmmaker of the Year Award and he was quick to point out just how large the potential for 3D is in the region.

In the world's fastest-growing movie market, with receipts rising by 61 percent to US$1.47 billion in 2010, Chinas cinema owners have embraced the 3D revolution.

Tsui, currently working on the 3D feature "The Flying Swords of Dragon Gate", told a press conference he estimated 4,000 of the nations 10,000 cinema screens were geared up to screen 3D films.

The IHS Screen Digest Cinema Intelligence report, released in August, said global 3D ticket sales soared to US$6.1 billion last year -- up from US$2.5 billion in 2009.

That would have come as good news for South Korean director Park Hong-min. His debut 3D feature "A Fish" also made its world premiere at BIFF -- and it is a low-key film that ended up costing him only US$100,000 to make.

The thriller, which follows a mans search for the wife who has left him to become a shaman, uses the nuances of digital technology more than relying on any lavish, jaw-dropping effects.

"When I first started thinking about making a 3D film I thought about all the special effects but I wanted to use it to exaggerate what people are seeing in more normal situations and to then blur the lines between fantasy and reality," said the director.

Park said 3D technology was a format more independent filmmakers were exploring, even though in the beginning they might have to work through a process of trial and error.

"At the moment, for small filmmakers, we dont have a lot of knowledge about how 3D films are made," said Park. "You have to figure it out for yourself. I spent nine months in post-production and I never really turned my computer off. I had to solve all the problems myself.

"But this is my first 3D feature so I knew I had to take everything on -- and 3D is becoming more and more a part of the film medium."

BIFF continues until Friday and closes with the announcement of its main New Currents award for Asian filmmakers, and with the world premiere of the drama "Chronicle of My Mother" by Japanese director Masato Harada.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Rihanna finds her way to top of UK charts

LONDON (Reuters) - Barbados-born R&B singer Rihanna went straight to the top of singles charts with "We Found Love" to claim her sixth British number one, the Official Charts Company said on Sunday.

Her six number ones in five consecutive years is a record unequalled by any other female solo artist.

The single, featuring Scottish DJ and producer Calvin Harris, notched up sales of more than 87,000 in just four days.

The U.S.-based singer is due to release her sixth studio album next month.

American pop band Maroon 5, featuring Christina Aguilera, held steady in second place with "Moves like Jagger."

Spanish DJ Sak Noel, who secured his first British number one single last week with the dance anthem "Loca People," dropped two places to number three.

In the albums chart, James Morrison held onto number one for a second week with "The Awakening."

(Reporting by Avril Ormsby; Editing by Andrew Heavens)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

A Minute With: Evan Rachel Wood on "Ides of March"

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Sex, interns, politics and backstabbing are the highly combustible elements that form the backdrop for "The Ides of March," the new political drama co-written and directed by George Clooney which opens in theaters on Friday.

Clooney also portrays an ethically-challenged governor running for president in the tale about an idealistic press spokesman (Ryan Gosling) whose clandestine affair with a sexy young intern (Evan Rachel Wood) compromises the campaign.

"Ides of March" wowed critics and fans at festivals in September, and even though Clooney tops marquees and Gosling is the key character, the plot truly revolves around the intern Molly, portrayed by Wood.

The actress, 24, who has starred in films such as "The Wrestler" and on TV's "True Blood," spoke with Reuters about "Ides" and working Clooney and Gosling.

Q: Molly's father is a big political figure and she's this very complicated mix of maturity and naivete, isn't she?

A: "Exactly, and one of my favorite characters ever. She's grown up in this political world around men, so she's not intimidated by any of them, and she throws them all off their game. She's very cool, collected and witty, but underneath she's still young, barely 20, and gets in way over her head.

Q: How much of you is in her?

A: "A lot. We're very similar. I grew up in a very male-dominated world too. I always feel like one of the guys and very un-intimidated too."

Q: She's really the pivotal character. Did you feel a lot of pressure to perform well?

A: "George and I discussed her a lot, and we wanted to show that she was in control of all her decisions. She wasn't manipulated, and I think she's one of the only honest characters in the whole movie. Everyone else is basically a liar, or out for themselves, and she's the one who ends up getting punished for her honesty. It's very sad."

Q: How much research into the whole backroom political machinery did you do?

A: "George gave us all these great documentaries to watch -- 'The War Room' about Bill Clinton's campaign, and others about what the interns and press and candidates go through, and it was fascinating. I'd never seen that side of it before."

Q: Any surprises working with George?

A: "It was my first time, and he's just what you'd expect -- or better, really. He's very easy going, easy to work with, and all about making a great film but also making it a great experience. He really takes care of everyone."

Q: Ryan Gosling seems perfectly cast as the spokesman.

A: "You couldn't ask for a better leading man. We hung out a lot in rehearsals and laughed a lot, so by the time we began shooting it we knew each other quite well. Playing opposite him is like playing a great tennis player. He's got great rhythm."

Q: "Ides" paints a pretty unflattering picture of what really goes on behind the scenes. Did you come away feeling cynical about the whole political process?

A: "Unfortunately I was already pretty cynical (laughs). We tried to make a political film and shady dealings go on in every type of business. The big question we dealt with here is, when you find yourself in a moral dilemma, do you compromise your integrity and everything you believe in just to win, and for the 'greater good'?"

Q: You come from an acting family and have been in the business since you were five. Was there ever a time when you felt, 'What I really want to do is be a truck driver,' or did acting feel almost predestined?

A: (Laughs) "It kind of felt predestined and it's something I've always done. I don't remember a time when I wasn't acting. I have taken time off to figure out if it's what I really want to do, and it is. The only other job I'd want is to be a psychologist, as I spend most of my time analyzing people and emotions. They're kind of similar professions in that regard, but acting's more fun."

(Editing by Bob Tourtellotte)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Baghdad opens third film festival since invasion

BAGHDAD (Reuters) - Cinema fans in Iraq opened the third Baghdad International Film Festival this week in an attempt to revive the country's movie industry after years of financial and security struggles since the 2003 U.S. invasion.

Violence in Iraq has fallen sharply since the height of sectarian strife in 2006-07 and the country is trying to rebuild itself. Film fans aspire to revive a time when Indian and Western action movies were popular at Baghdad cinemas, and social clubs also often showed films.

Today, only two cinemas operate in Baghdad and none outside the capital. Before former Iraqi President Saddam Hussein was ousted by a U.S.-led invasion in 2003 the country boasted more than 80 cinemas.

At the film festival's opening this week, the reception hall of the National Theater received about three hundred people, mainly Iraqi directors and actors. The hall holds about 1,000 people.

"We are trying to make this a success despite all the obstacles," Taher Alwan, one of the festival's directors, said.

The festival, organized by an NGO, No-Borders Iraqi Cinematographers, has only been held twice before, once in 2005 and once in 2007, because of violence, political strife, and funding constraints.

This week's festival opened with an Algerian film, "A Voyage to Algeria," followed by four Iraqi films, entitled "Smile Again," "Half Lightened," "Feather," and "The Visions."

Attendees grumbled over the poor screen quality. After about 10 minutes, many in the audience began to leave.

"I do not want to judge the festival from the first film shown," Ali al-Someri, an Iraqi director, said. "But I hope today's problems ... will be avoided tomorrow otherwise it would be a scandal."

Thirty-two countries have participated in this year's festival with more than 160 films, including the United States and Germany. The remainder of the films will be broadcast at three locations in Baghdad across the 8-day event.

There were few foreigners at this week's opening despite the international festival tag. Most notable was Moroccan Abdulaziz Bin al-Ghali, who heads a short film festival for the Arab world.

Baghdad's film festival this year operates on a tight budget of $30,000, mainly from European institutes.

"We have something," said Alwan. "It is better than nothing."

(Reporting by Aseel Kami; Editing by Shaimaa Fayed)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Wednesday, November 2, 2011

All Bieber wants for Christmas is...Mariah Carey

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - It's official. Justin Bieber is getting under the mistletoe with Mariah Carey.

Bieber, 17, has finally revealed to his fans on Twitter that he will be collaborating with the Grammy-winning singer on his upcoming Christmas album, "Under the Mistletoe."

In a video message posted by Bieber on his Twitter page on Tuesday, Carey announced the collaboration, confirming that the pair will be doing a duet of Carey's 1994 festive hit single, "All I want for Christmas is you."

"I think a lot of you are already very surprised by this, and you're going to be even more surprised when you hear it," said Carey in the message.

Carey, 41, is the latest singer to join a high-caliber list of artists who are collaborating with Bieber on his "Under the Mistletoe" album. They include Bieber's mentor Usher, R&B group Boys II Men, rapper Busta Rhymes and country group The Band Perry.

The first single from Bieber's Christmas album, "Mistletoe," will be released on Oct 18, with the full album due for release on Nov 1.

(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Jill Serjeant)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Asia Pacific Screen Awards announces nominees

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Two entries in the Academy's Best Foreign-Language Film category are among the five Best Feature Film nominees at the 2011 Asia Pacific Screen Awards, which announced its nominees on Monday.

Iran's "A Separation" (left) and Turkey's "Once Upon a Time in Anatolia," both Oscar entrants, were nominated for the APSA's top prize. Other nominees include another Iranian film, "Be Omid E Didar" ("Goodbye"), China's "Rang zidan fei" ("Let the Bullets Fly") and India's "Band Baaja Baaraat" ("Wedding Planners").

Overall, nominations went to 37 of the 240 films entered into the competition.

Asghar Farhadi's "A Separation" and Nuri Bilge Ceylan's "Once Upon a Time in Anatolia" each received four nominations to lead the pack. U.S. rights for the two films have been acquired by Sony Pictures Classics and the Cinema Guild, respectively.

Established in 2007, the Asia Pacific Screen Awards are an initiative of the government of Queensland, Australia, in collaboration with UNESCO and the International Federation of Film Producers. They are open to films from the Asia-Pacific region, an enormous area that stretches from Egypt to the Cook Islands, and from Russia to New Zealand.

Past winners include China's "Aftershock," Australia's "Samson & Delilah," Kazakhstan's "Tulpan" and Korea's "Miryang."

The 2011 winners will be determined by an international jury and announced at a ceremony in Queensland, Australia on November 24.

The full list of nominees can be found at the Asia Pacific Film Academy Web site.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Martina McBride's "Eleven" a nicely restrained fresh start

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - For a bona fide diva, Martina McBride seems surprisingly determined to damp down her huge voice. Which, in case you're wondering, is essentially a good thing.

On tour, she still hits nightly home runs with those big '90s ballads that climax with key changes and rafter-rattling soprano fireworks. But you won't find any such easy-listening-gone-wild moments on "Eleven," where McBride keeps her massive pipes in check and comfortably settles into the conversational style she's lately favored.

In other words, Martina is basically Celine Dion if Celine were vocally modest and had a sense of fun. And if Dion came from Kansas. And allowed harmonica solos.

Besides being her 11th album, "Eleven" marks her first break from the RCA/Sony corporation she spent almost 20 years with. She's starting over with Republic Nashville, sister label to Big Machine. (Yep, she got signed with some of that Taylor Swift money.) McBride has boasted about "Eleven" being more "rootsy and organic" -- although fans may recall these being the same talking points used to promote 2007's "Waking Up Laughing."

Her new co-producer, Bryon Gallimore, proves a solid match, striking the right balance between gloss -- which she's always going to have, even in her post-adult-contemporary phase -- and relative grit. "Eleven" has kitchen-sink elements, veering from peppy pop-country to old-school Music Row torch balladry to Nashville R&B. But Gallimore gets consistency out of these country subgenres by imbuing every track with a crisp live-band feel.

An inherently warm performer, McBride has a knack for doing "inspirational" without succumbing to schlock. Following in that tradition, "I'm Gonna Love You Through It," her current single, is her Breast Cancer Anthem. The that's-what-friends-are-for theme continues with "You're in My House Now," a celebration of sheer hospitality that somehow avoids being as hokey as any description makes it sound.

Your sugar tolerance may be more severely tested by "Marry Me," a Train song now turned into a duet between McBride and pal Pat Monahan. It would've been even better as a duet between McBride and the steel guitar that intermittently floats into the mix, but you can't blame her for favoring the better-known partner.

Here's some good news, anyhow: Somewhere around track 7, "Eleven" turns into as pure a country album as McBride has made, and it stays there.

"Teenage Daughters," a good-natured parental lament, makes McBride into the Loretta-esque housewife next door, if the neighboring hausfrau were suppressing a multi-octave range. "Whatcha Gonna Do" takes marital strain more seriously, in the tradition of another literally questioning McBride oldie, "Where Would You Be."

The album reaches its emotional low point -- but a musical high point -- with the classic-style C&W weeper "When You Love a Sinner," soon to be played at Al-Anon meetings across middle America.

But the album's standout is the similarly dysfunction-resigned "Closing Time." Unfortunately, you'll have to buy the Target-only deluxe edition to hear it. In fact, all four of the songs exclusive to that expanded package are arguably as strong as any of the 11 tunes on the standard version.

Remember when bonus tracks were obviously inferior leftovers or even runts of the studio litter, not highlights deliberately withheld to draw more traffic to big-box chains? Is it time for music fans tired of shelling out for deluxe and/or retailer-exclusive editions to organize an #OccupyBestBuy protest?


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

"The Thing" returns to movie theaters

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - It's been 60 years since alien thriller movie "The Thing From Another World" hit theaters at the height of Cold War paranoia and half that long since horror director John Carpenter revisited its themes in "The Thing."

On Friday, a new "The Thing" is back in movie theaters, hungrier than ever, in a version being billed as a prequel to Carpenter's examination of fear that is centered on an alien from another world who is discovered by scientists on Antarctica.

Dutch director Matthijs van Heijningen makes his feature film debut with the new movie that has 27 year-old Mary Elizabeth Winstead ("Scott Pilgrim vs. the World") playing paleontologist Kate Lloyd, who is hired as part of a mysterious scientific expedition and ends up battling the alien.

Australian actor Joel Edgerton ("Animal Kingdom") co-stars as a veteran helicopter pilot who services the remote Antarctica base where a Norwegian team of scientists has stumbled across the alien and its spaceship buried in the ice.

Van Heijningen said he is a fan of both earlier "Thing" films, but he sees his version as "very logically tied-in to the events of...the Carpenter movie." Yet, the new version exhibits a 2011 sensibility with its international cast and female character leading the charge to kill the alien.

"Surrounded by all these older men and isolated on this base, maybe she already feels uncomfortable -- a bit of an outcast. My reference for envisioning her was actually Jane Goodall. For me, she's the ultimate female scientist," van Heijningen said.

BUTT-KICKING PALEONTOLOGIST

Van Heijningen cites the famed British anthropologist as an inspiration, but his character Kate Lloyd seems more akin to the "Alien's" Ripley, the woman portrayed by Sigourney Weaver who battles the otherworldly creature in that 1979 film.

"She's very smart, but she's very young and inexperienced, and she gets invited to join this expedition because they (the male scientists) think they can easily control her. That's how she starts out," Winstead said of her character.

"But when the very bad things start to happen, she's the one who starts kicking butt and really figuring out what they have to do in order to survive. Not the men," she said.

The best horror films are both timeless, yet very much of their time. "The Thing From Another World" (1951) is seen as reflecting America's paranoia about communism, and Carpenter's "The Thing" (1982) has been viewed as a thinly veiled parable about the horrors of AIDS.

This new "Thing" could be viewed as a commentary on the present-day threat from the global war on terror, its makers said, but Van Heijningen was quick to add that he didn't set out to comment on modern times.

"It's first and foremost a horror film about an alien. But you can definitely make the parallel in the sense that we have terrorists among us, pretending to be good neighbors, while they have a very different, hidden agenda."

Winstead agrees there is a timely subtext to "The Thing" dealing with trusting, or not, acquaintances and others But she added that the horror genre allows people to share their fright, perhaps even laugh at it, then shrug it off.

"It's a way of living vicariously through terrifying events, and the audience comes through it unscathed. That's what this film does. You live through all the rising tension and paranoia, and then you get to walk away."

(Editing by Chris Michaud and Bob Tourtellotte)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Beatlemania revived ahead of auction in Argentina

BUENOS AIRES (Reuters Life!) - An original drawing by John Lennon is part of the more than 120 lots of Beatles memorabilia that will be auctioned in Argentina by South America's largest collector of the Fab Four.

Lennon's sketch starts at a bidding price of 100,000 pesos ($22,535) and features stick figures of Lennon and his wife, Yoko Ono. In a corner of the picture, an inscription reads: "1+1=John+Yoko. 'Tis simple math guys."

The trove that will be auctioned on October 13 by Banco Ciudad is owned by Argentine Raul Blisniuk, who entered the Guinness Book of Records in 1998 as South America's greatest collector of Beatles mementos.

It also features pristine black-and-white photographs, a bass autographed by Paul McCartney, signed checks, LP's and even real dollar bills with pictures of the world's most influential rock group placed over George Washington's face.

"My passion for The Beatles comes from childhood ... I grew up with Beatlemania and I'm a Beatles fanatic," said Blisniuk, who began collecting photos of the group's records at age 13.

"I came from a poor family so my dad couldn't afford the records, but over time, I started saving newspaper clippings, magazines, and my collection grew," he said.

At an event to present the items in Buenos Aires on Tuesday, members of a Beatles tribute band called Danger Four arrived in a London Black Cab wearing dark suits and sporting Beatles hairstyles.

They played some of the group's best-known tunes to commemorate the Beatles' last live performance: an impromptu concert on January 30, 1969 on the roof of their Savile Row Apple headquarters before surprised Londoners on their lunch break.

Danger Four performed instead on the top of the Banco Ciudad building in downtown Buenos Aires.

Below, screaming fans in 1960s garb, played by actors, and curious onlookers snapping pictures with cell phone cameras clogged traffic.

"The Beatles are energy and that's why we know they're always attention-grabbers. They're unique and I don't think there will be anyone like them again," said Blisniuk.

"I've always said that the most important things in my life are my family, and then, the Beatles," he said.

(Reporting by Luis Andres Henao; editing by Patricia Reaney)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Review: "Idol" Scotty McCreery aims for the mushy middle

By Chris Willman

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - The path Scotty McCreery would take after being crowned king of "American Idol's" 10th season couldn't have been clearer. Like Carrie Underwood before him, the 17-year-old winner would renounce any pop crossover temptations, record contemporary country with a slightly traditional twist, and declare to his handlers, "Music Row, take the wheel."

Not surprisingly, then, McCreery's debut album, "Clear as Day," pretty much follows the template you'd expect. With one very slight wrinkle, though: He sings high.

Or high-er, anyway, considering that we're discussing the most famous baritone of 2011. After watching McCreery on "Idol," country pros wondered if there was really a glaring need for a mini-Josh Turner, once the novelty of hearing a high school kid sing deeper than the holler wore off. But McCreery doesn't sound much like his idol, Turner, on "Clear as Day" after all.

Instead, pushed into his (relative) upper range by producer Mark Bright, he sounds a lot like a wholesomer Dierks Bentley, to name a country hunk with a less subwoofer-rattling baritone than Turner's.

The good news is, the album arrives bearing far better songs than "I Love You This Much," the coronation single that started fast but stalled on the country chart at No. 15, proving it is still possible to produce a ballad too treacly for country radio programmers.

Unfortunately, the second single, "The Trouble With Girls," isn't one of these superior tracks. The sweetly playful lyrics extol everything wonderful about the female of the species, concluding that "the trouble with girls is nobody loves trouble as much as me." But the sappy music seems to have been written for a different set of words, as if McCreery were supposed to be singing about Jesus taking the wheel, not chick magnetism.

Those two numbers are part of a stretch of three consecutive ballads that bogs down the album's early going. The third song in this down-tempo trilogy is the title track, in which McCreery mourns the girl who got away -- because, we eventually learn, she died in a car crash. Whether it's a cautionary tale about drunk driving or the "fog" mentioned in the final stanza really was to blame remains ambiguous. And lugubrious.

The pace finally picks up midway through the album, as its assemblers remember that even the upper female demo that drives both "Idol" and country radio likes men (or boys) with a little bit of pep in 'em.

And it's once McCreery gets into a stretch of near-rockers -- like the requisite small-town anthem, "Water Tower Town," and the requisite romance-among-the-ticks ode, "Walk in the Country" -- that McCreery seriously sounds like the winner of a Dierks doppelganger competition. If you hear Keith Urban, too, in the combination of power chords and banjo plucking, it doesn't hurt that "Walk in the Country" is a cover of a long-forgotten number from Urban's first album.

Though some expectations foresaw Scotty veering into ultra-traditional territory, the only selection in that vein is "Write My Number on Your Hand," a winsome slice of lite-Western swing that answers the question: What would George Strait sound like as an apple-cheeked adolescent? (McCreery even throws in a Bob Wills-style "aaah, ha!" at the end.)

The G-rated "Clear as Day" is very much an alcohol-free and tank top-avoidant zone, but there aren't many other thematic country bases McCreedy doesn't touch, least of all the maternal one. Toward the end, he offers not one but two odes to the selfless mothers of the world, "Dirty Dishes" and "That Old King James." Mama tried -- and succeeded!

But the kid desperately needs a "tempo" song as a third single. You would have thought the second would be "Out of Summertime," since it was a contender to be his coronation song and got leaked at the time. The lyric would be perfect for easy autumn listening, but maybe someone noticed how uncomfortably close it comes to Kenny Chesney's "Young."

McCreery turns 18 this week, and between that and the hurry to get post-"Idol" albums recorded, it's hard to work up umbrage about how he lacks his own identity, though Underwood didn't have much of one, either, when she broke out with a career-defining first single, in the hands of the same producer.

Will Scotty be beamed up to whatever obscure place Lee DeWyze currently remains marooned, or have a chance to find himself and grow into a keeper? Even after hearing his debut album, the answer's still opaque as night.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

ESPN and Hank Williams Jr. part ways on "MNF"

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - ESPN and country music artist Hank Williams Jr. have parted ways, both parties announced on Thursday, following controversial comments in which Williams compared President Barack Obama to Adolf Hitler on Monday.

ESPN said in a statement that Williams' song "All My Rowdy Friends," which has been the opening theme song for ESPN and ABC's "Monday Night Football" for about 20 years, will no longer used as the opener for the show.

"We have decided to part ways with Hank Williams, Jr," ESPN said. "We appreciate his contributions over the past years. The success of 'Monday Night Football' has always been about the games and that will continue."

But Grammy-winning Williams, 62, indicating that he had made the decision to end his partnership with ESPN.

"After reading hundreds of e-mails, I have made MY decision. By pulling my opening Oct 3rd, You (ESPN) stepped on the Toes of The First Amendment Freedom of Speech, so therefore Me, My Song, and All My Rowdy Friends are OUT OF HERE. It's been a great run," Williams said in a statement on his official website.

The final rift came after the sports network pulled the song from the opener of "Monday Night Football" on Monday after Williams said in a Fox News Channel appearance that Obama's pairing with Republican House of Representatives Speaker John Boehner in a June golf summit was "like Hitler playing golf with (Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin) Netanyahu."

ESPN swiftly replaced the "All My Rowdy Friends" theme with the national anthem on Monday.

Williams later acknowledged that his analogy was "extreme" and apologized if he had offended anyone, but added that the thought of opposing politicians "high fiven on a golf course while so many families are struggling to get by simply made me boil over and make a dumb statement."

There was no word on Thursday on what the replacement theme song for ESPN's "Monday Night Football" will be.

(Reporting by Piya Sinha-Roy; Editing by Jill Serjeant)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Talks break down between AFTRA, record labels

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - Talks between AFTRA and record labels have broken down.

The American Federation of Television and Radio Artists and the labels have been negotiating since August and despite about 16 meetings, have been unable to come to an agreement.

No more negotiating sessions are scheduled.

Major issues standing between the two sides include health care and pension security and transparency of accounting.

The current contract, which covers about 14,500 people, expires December 31.

AFTRA and representatives from Sony, UMG, Warner, EMI, Disney and most of their subsidiary labels began formal negotiations August 15 in New York. Talks went for two weeks. After that, the sides met for another week in Los Angeles.

Because they couldn't reach an agreement, they met for a final day in New York on October 5 -- but still couldn't agree.

On October 2, AFTRA's national board of directors gave the union's negotiating committee permission to seek a strike authorization vote.

"While AFTRA is not currently on strike in Sound Recordings, the AFTRA National Board has unanimously authorized the Negotiating Committee to take all actions necessary, up to and including ... a strike authorization vote," according to a statement AFTRA released Friday.

According to the union, "the AFTRA Negotiating Committee stands ready, willing and able to meet and receive a fair proposal from the major labels in order to resolve a fair contract for the session singers and royalty artists whose talents provide the music that keeps these multibillion dollar corporations in business."

The contract was originally set to expire in 2010, but was extended for one year.

The Sound Recordings Code "covers singers, royalty and non-royalty artists, as well as announcers, actors, comedians, narrators and sound effects artists who work on recordings in all new and traditional media and all music formats, in addition to audio books, comedy albums and cast albums."

According to the union, the code generates more than $140 million annually in AFTRA-covered earnings and benefits for both major artists and session singers around the country.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Emir Kusturica to head jury in Marrakesh film festival

Serbian film director Emir Kusturica will be the next president of the Marrakesh International Film Festival, in the south of Morocco, organisers announced on Tuesday.

Kusturica, renowned for feature films such as "Underground" and "Arizona Dream," his US debut, has also made documentaries, such as "Maradona" in 2008. He twice won the Palme d'Or at Cannes, for "When Father Was Away on Business" and "Underground."

He will be taking over the chair at Marrakesh from American actor and film-maker John Malkovich.

In 2009, the Marrakesh Film Festival paid tribute to Kusturica, who will preside over its 11th edition on December 2 to 10. This year's festival will render homage to Mexican cinema, organisers said.

The Gold Star, or main prize, of the 2010 edition of the festival was awarded to "The Journals of Musan" by South Korean director Park Jungbun.


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Leslie Feist counts down to heartache in "Metals"

LOS ANGELES (TheWrap.com) - If you loved Feist's breakout hit of a few years back, the jaunty "1234," then you'll love -- or hate -- her new album, "Metals," which is basically an extended countdown to heartache.

Let's just say that if any of this downcast music gets licensed by an ad agency, it'll be for Abilify, not Apple.

But lest you get scared off prematurely, also be aware that "Metals" is probably the most gorgeous album you'll hear in 2011.

More than on any of the Canadian singer/songwriter's previous three albums, Leslie Feist has alchemized her chamber pop into something so pretty, it hurts.

She doesn't ladle the melancholia on so thick that the emotionally neutral among us won't be able to appreciate its charms.

But if you haven't recently been through a split, you might want to instigate one, just to establish the right clinical conditions to appreciate a breakup album this beauteous.

You'll know whether it's for you from the opening song, "The Bad in Each Other."

A heavy percussive stomp leads to a tough, Lindsey Buckingham-in-the-Appalachians guitar line as Feist sings about how she and her star-crossed lover "had the same feelings at opposite times."

Soothing brass and strings settle in to salve the soul as Feist sings about how "a good man and a good woman bring out the worst in the other."

Bitterness usually makes for better music than a lack of acrimony, but there's something tough, not wimpy, about Feist's fatalistic fair-mindedness.

If that opener was haunting, the word applies doubly to the second track, "Graveyard," which has Feist taking a brief break from nursing romantic wounds to take up matters of mortality.

"Bring 'em all back to life!," she and a group of women sing, almost as a spirited mantra, sounding like a children's chorus making demands on God on behalf of all their dearly departed elders.

It's a more impressionistic then overtly confessional collection of songs.

The gossamer "Caught a Long Wind" is a showcase for the jazz-like dexterity of Feist's delicate soprano, with the sparest piano and strings underscoring the sense of post-flight disappointment as she laments, "I got to know the sky, but it didn't know me."

The single "How Come You Never Go There," while still lulling, has a bit more swing, and considerably more jagged guitar edges. "You're an instrumental tune," she tells her incommunicative lover -- and coming from such a gifted vocalist, that's quite a jab.

Then again, if "Metals" were an all-instrumental album, it'd still be pretty marvelous.

The tracks were recorded live inside a house on the Northern California coast (you can look at the videos on her website for plenty of indoor and outdoor footage).

But the first reaction to the hard-to-pinpoint reverb may be to imagine the sessions were recorded inside a small church, a la Cowboy Junkies' sonically revelatory "Trinity Sessions."


View the original article here

Read rest of entry

Rocker and romancer Rod Stewart to publish memoir

NEW YORK (Reuters) - Rod Stewart, the raspy-voiced rocker, will publish his memoirs next year, promising to "hold nothing back" in detailing a career in which he sold more than a 100 million records, survived cancer and romanced a string of blond bombshells.

Stewart's book, which is yet to be titled but will be published worldwide by Random House, comes as he has toned down his rock and roll act, concentrating on remaking standards by everyone from Cole Porter to George Gershwin.

Due out in October 2012, the book follows renewed interest in rock autobiographies thanks to bestsellers by Aerosmith's Steven Tyler and The Rolling Stones' Keith Richards and an upcoming release by Neil Young.

Stewart, 66, rose to superstar fame with a string of hits, including "Maggie May," "Tonight's The Night," "Do Ya Think I'm Sexy," and "Some Guys Have All The Luck." Over his 50-year music career, he has had 31 top-10 singles in Britain and 16 top-10 singles in the United States.

"It is a funny old thing telling my life story but I truly intend to hold nothing back," Stewart said in a statement. "Forget skeletons in the closet; this one's going to be socks and knickers under the bed."

Born in North London, Stewart left school at 15 and had his start with The Ray Davies Quartet, which later become The Kinks, before his first big break in 1967 when he teamed up with the Jeff Beck Group, where he joined Jeff Beck of the Yardbirds and Ronnie Wood, who went on to join The Rolling Stones.

Stewart subsequently took his spiky, rooster-style hair and working class songs to a new London supergroup, Faces, joined by Wood. He struck it big with his 1971 with his mega-hit "Maggie May" on his solo "Every Picture Tells A Story" album.

From there, his career caught fire as he alternated solo work with tours and albums with the Faces, even as his personal life began making tabloid headlines.

Moving to the United States in the mid-seventies and concentrating on his solo career, Stewart began wearing new wave suits and cemented his reputation as a playboy, dating Swedish actress Britt Ekland, model Bebe Buell and Alana Hamilton, another model whom he eventually married.

Stewart and Hamilton had two children before divorcing in 1984. He had another child with Kelly Emberg, and then married supermodel Rachel Hunter in 1990. The couple, who had two children, divorced in 2006.

He finally married Penny Lancaster, yet another blond model, and fathered two more children.

Stewart once said Brigitte Bardot was the only woman he'd ever had a sexual fantasy about. "With me, looks come first, and she's everything a woman should be. She's blond and beautiful, she's got the most incredible legs, etc. etc. And she's French as well."

An inductee into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame and recipient of the Commander of the Order of the British Empire, Stewart was diagnosed with thyroid cancer, threatening his life and his career. He underwent throat surgery in 2000, and since then has been an active fundraiser for cancer charities.

(Reporting by Paul Thomasch, editing by Mark Egan and Jill Serjeant)


View the original article here

Read rest of entry
 

Entertainment Bomb Copyright © 2009