Ex-Monty Python star puts on opera (AP)

By BARRY HATTON, Associated Press Writer 27 minutes ago

LISBON, Portugal - Terry Jones giggles as he describes his latest project: vacuum cleaners, dryers and parking meters singing opera on stage.

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The Monty Python alumnus and an all-Portuguese cast are rehearsing for the Jan. 12 world premiere in Lisbon of “Evil Machines.” Jones co-wrote the libretto and is directing.

To make the author’s vision real, the singers climb into elaborate costumes, including one that creates a 15-foot-tall vacuum cleaner.

“I just thought it would be great fun to have all these machines singing,” Jones said after a recent rehearsal at Lisbon’s Sao Luis theater, adding with mischievous glee: “It’s something you’ve never seen before.”

The show captures some of the absurdity that was the hallmark of the British comedy troupe Jones co-founded. Almost 40 years on, he retains that offbeat sense of humor.

In one chanted line the cast confides: “There’s no one meaner than a vacuum cleaner.” Elsewhere they rage: “Parking meters, parking meters, parking meters from hell!”

At a recent rehearsal, he repeatedly leapt from his chair on the side of a room of bare floorboards and big windows to explain stage directions. Soft-spoken, in black trousers and a black open-necked shirt, he acted out the moves he had imagined. The good-humored cast — all trained opera singers — exchanged comments in English and Portuguese before the grand piano picked up again.

“They’re all very willing,” Jones said. “I was worried that opera singers wouldn’t want to act but they’re all getting into the spirit of it.”

The Lisbon project follows a collaboration last year when Portuguese composer Luis Tinoco set some of Jones’ children’s stories to music using a 60-piece orchestra. The concerts in the Portuguese capital were a success, and Jones turned his collection of short stories into a libretto for a new production.

He couldn’t imagine how his fantasy might take shape — until he ended up directing it.

“I said, `How are you going to do this?’ I thought that was their problem, but then they said, `Would you like to direct it?’ I thought, `Hmm, I can’t say no.’”

The original Monty Python show — featuring Jones, Eric Idle, Graham Chapman, John Cleese, Terry Gilliam and Michael Palin — ran on the BBC from 1969 to 1974. Jones often appeared in drag as a shrill middle-aged woman or as an indignant British gent in a bowler hat.

Though not one of the most immediately recognizable Pythons, Jones’s fame endures in Portugal. He recently went to see a Portuguese production in Lisbon of the troupe’s most famous sketches. In the second month of its run, it was playing to 600-seat sell-outs.

“I thought it was really good fun,” Jones said of the show — though he doesn’t speak Portuguese and admits he didn’t recognize a couple of the sketches.

Oxford-educated Jones, 65, is not only an actor, comedian, writer and director. He also pens newspaper articles on political issues and has written and presented medieval history documentaries for the BBC. He recently went on a lecture tour of the United States to give his radical new appraisal of England’s King Richard II.

He expects to keep pursuing that wide range of interests — not daring to dream that “Evil Machines” could match the success of the Broadway hit “Monty Python’s Spamalot,” a Tony-winning musical based on the movie, “Monty Python and the Holy Grail.”

“I don’t think it’s quite got the popular appeal of `Spamalot,’” Jones conceded.

Even so, he gladly ticks off the cities where he would like to take the show — London and New York.

Ne-Yo Suing Mad over R. Kelly Tour Dissing (E! Online)

Josh Grossberg Wed Jan 2, 6:50 AM ET

Los Angeles (E! Online) - Because of him, Ne-Yo is taking legal action.

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The rising R&B star has filed a lawsuit claiming he was booted off R. Kelly's tour because fans and critics alike preferred Ne-Yo's act to the headliner.

Instead of suing Kelly, however, Ne-Yo (real name: Shaffer Chimere Smith) and his reps at Compound Touring Inc. are targeting the tour promoter, Georgia-based Rowe Entertainment. In their complaint, filed Monday in Los Angeles Superior Court, the "So Sick" singer and his handlers accuse Rowe of breaching Ne-Yo's touring contract and violating his right of publicity by firing the 25-year-old from Kelly's Double Up tour just before Thanksgiving.

The North American jaunt, in support of Kelly's album of the same name, also featured Keyshia Cole and J. Holiday on the bill.

Per legal papers, the Los Angeles-headquartered Compound Touring, which was responsible for arranging Ne-Yo's participation, claims it lost major moolah after Ne-Yo was given the heave-ho after performing at just two of the concerts.

"[Compound spent] substantial monies in preparation for the tour and turned down other touring and performance opportunities for Smith in reliance on Rowe's agreement that Smith would perform on the tour," the suit states.

Following the abrupt dumping, Kelly's camp explained away Ne-Yo's dismissal as a "contractual issue" between him and the promoter, saying Kelly played no part in the decision.

Court papers, however, dispute that assertion, suggesting instead that Kelly's reps didn't like what they were hearing after the first reviews were in.

"Plaintiffs…allege…that an unknown representative of R. Kelly urged Rowe to terminate Smith from the tour given the audience and critics' more favorable reaction to Smith than the reaction to R. Kelly," the suit says.

Ne-Yo expressed a similar sentiment following his booting, telling BET "people were talking more about my set than [Kelly's], and I don't think he liked that too much."

Ne-Yo's attorney, Zachary Rothenberg, declined to comment; as did Kelly's publicist, Allan Mayer, noting his client was not named in the suit. Reps for Rowe were not immediately available.

Ne-Yo and Compound Touring are seeking unspecified damages.

The lawsuit claims the entertainer expected to earn $785,000 for a 25-concert swing that got underway Nov. 14. He pocketed $50,000 for his two-gig effort.

The Double Up tour is expected to wrap up Jan. 13 in Hampton, Virginia.

Kelly, 40, is no stranger to losing tourmates. Kelly and Jay-Z's Best of Both Worlds tour infamously flamed out amid animosity between the headliners.

While Kelly won't have to go to court to defend Ne-Yo's allegations, he does have a looming trial in his long-delayed child-pornography case after a Chicago judge recently set a May 9 start date.

 

MC Hammer’s next act: Tech entrepreneur (AP)

By MICHAEL LIEDTKE, AP Business Writer 5 minutes ago

SAN FRANCISCO - MC Hammer hasn’t topped the music charts since the early 1990s, but the former rap star says he has another hit in him — only this time around he’ll produce it as a Silicon Valley entrepreneur.

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Hammer, whose real name is Stanley Burrell, is choreographing a new career as co-founder and chief strategy officer of Menlo Park-based DanceJam.com.

The Web site, scheduled to debut in mid-January, will try to upstage YouTube and become the Internet’s hub for sharing and watching dance videos. DanceJam then hopes to make money by grabbing a piece of the rapidly growing Internet advertising market, which is expected to rake in $27.5 billion in 2008, according to eMarketer.

If the business pans out, DanceJam could help Hammer compensate for losing his fortune when he went bankrupt in 1996 with nearly $14 million in debts.

The bankruptcy was a sobering comedown for Hammer, who parlayed the popularity of his once-ubiquitous song, “U Can’t Touch This,” to become a pop icon in the early 1990s. Besides becoming a fixture on MTV, Hammer appeared on kids’ lunch boxes and even had his own action figure.

Although Hammer isn’t churning out best-selling records any longer, everyone still seems to know his name. Even children born after his downfall are familiar with his music because “U Can’t Touch This” still gets played in TV shows and movies.

But Hammer’s involvement in DanceJam has more to do with his technological savvy than his celebrity, said Ron Conway, a longtime Silicon Valley investor who is part of a small group that provided DanceJam with $1 million in startup funds.

“I expect him to integrate all his knowledge into this Web site,” said Conway, who befriended Hammer at a baseball game seven years ago and has been tutoring him in the ways of technology ever since. “He is the lightning rod for this whole thing.”

Hammer, 45, started poking around Silicon Valley while he was still selling millions of records. He often hung out at computer makers like Silicon Graphics Inc. and Apple Inc., hoping to learn more about how technology might help his music career.

“There is no high-tech lingo or business strategy that you can talk that is above my head,” Hammer boasted during an interview. “I breathe this stuff.”

Hammer’s entrepreneurial roots date back to the 1980s when he began recording songs with financial help from a few Oakland Athletics, where he once worked as a ball boy. His nickname came from his resemblance to the former home run king, Hammerin’ Hank Aaron.

Without the support of a major music label, Hammer built a loyal fan base by hitting the streets and selling his early recordings out of a car.

His success in grass roots marketing prompted Salesforce.com Inc. to call on Hammer for advice in its early days. The company wanted to raise awareness about its online software service without paying a lot for traditional advertising, said Marc Benioff, Salesforce.com’s chief executive officer.

“We really learned a lot from Hammer. He is the most entrepreneurial individual I have ever met,” said Benioff, whose San Francisco-based company is now worth $7 billion.

Hammer and his DanceJam partners — Geoffrey Arone, the chief executive, and Anthony Young, the chief technology officer — are wading into a market already saturated with dozens of Web sites that have built huge video libraries.

Arone became convinced the Web needed a site devoted exclusively to dance shortly after he left Web browsing startup Flock, which he had co-founded. Hammer had been feeling the same way about dance for years so they quickly hit it off when they first met and hammered out the concept for DanceJam.

Drawing upon the popularity of reality shows like “Dancing With The Stars,” DanceJam will stage head-to-head competitions where contestants submit videos that will be judged by viewers. The site also will provide demonstrations and information about a wide variety of dances, ranging from the Boogaloo to the Krump.

Arone, Hammer and Young have spent several months videotaping people around the country dancing. They say they have stockpiled about 100 gigabytes of video to help launch DanceJam.

James McQuivey, a media analyst with Forrester Research, doubts that will be enough to lure people away from Google Inc.’s YouTube, which listed 1.7 million dance videos in its index as of late December.

“When people are looking for any video, whether it be about skateboarding, dancing or a science project, they don’t stop to think about where’s the best place to find it. They just start off by going to YouTube,” McQuivey said.

The most watched video in YouTube’s 2 1/2-year history happens to be about dancing. The 6-minute clip, a facetious tribute called “Evolution of Dance,” includes about 25 seconds alluding to some of the moves that Hammer made famous back when he was still wearing colorful parachute pants as he sang “U Can’t Touch This.”

Hammer recognized YouTube’s potential before most people he did. Besides putting some of his own clips on the site, Hammer visited YouTube’s offices in February 2006 when there were still just a handful of people running the site above a pizza parlor. (A clip of that visit is at http://www.youtube.com/blog?month2&year2006.)

Until he saw what YouTube was doing, Hammer had doubts about the Web’s entertainment value. “When everybody started raving about the Internet, I always wondered, ‘If it’s so great, why can’t you see my videos on the Internet?’” Hammer said. “It looks like technology has finally caught up with my vision.”

___

On the ‘Net:

http://www.dancejam.com

10 fresh faces hope to make splash in 2008 (Reuters)

12 minutes ago

NEW YORK (Billboard) - The first few months of the year are an ideal time for rising acts to grab their share of attention and, they hope, sales. That's true for upcoming releases and new promotional boosts for sets already on hand.

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Here are 10 hot faces to watch from genres including pop, rock, country, R&B, hip-hop, Christian, jazz and dance.

KATE VOEGELE (MySpace Records)

Sometimes things are better the second time around. So it seems in Kate Voegele's case, when she re-releases her MySpace Records debut, "Don't Look Away," January 22. The move comes as the 21-year-old singer/songwriter transitions from the stage to the small screen.

Voegele scores her first acting role as the musician Mia on the popular CW series "One Tree Hill," starting with its January 22 episode.

"I felt like the audience (for the show) is my audience," Voegele says. "'One Tree Hill' has always been an awesome vehicle for new artists. Plus, now there's this whole idea that art imitates life."

On the show, one of the main characters discovers Mia and later signs her to a record deal. Voegele will be heard playing songs like the single "Only Fooling Myself" on the show.

The young performer has spent time touring with artists like John Mayer and Ben Lee, and is in the midst of planning a full tour itinerary surrounding the set's re-release, which will feature a new album cover that will more closely reflect her role on "One Tree Hill." Copies of the album — originally released in May 2007 — sold through Target will also include three bonus acoustic versions of previously released tracks.

BLITZEN TRAPPER (Sub Pop Records)

Visually and sonically, Portland, Ore.-based Blitzen Trapper could best be described as "modern classic rock." It's got hooks and chops and beards, and it records every song the old-fashioned way — on a crackling four-track.

The band signed to Sub Pop in 2007 and will release a new album come summertime; if the last two discs were any sort of indication, the new one will be full of strange lyrics and beefy instrumentation.

Blitzen Trapper may well explode in 2008 for a number of reasons. Nostalgia-obsessed hipsters will appreciate that these dudes look like a band their parents could have watched at some dive bar in the '70s. Bloggers will OMG and LOL themselves silly over the genre-spanning nature of the group: Its last record included influences from blues, rock, electronics and country, and garnered more than one Pavement comparison for its sprawling nature.

But most important, fans of solid, well-crafted rock'n'roll appreciate the band's commitment to solid musicianship and good old-fashioned hard work and song craft.

Sub Pop is mum about marketing plans thus far, but with an act of this caliber, it might just be wise to sit back and let the music sell itself.

ANANE (Tommy Boy Records)

Dance music is full of wannabe divas over-singing and attempting charisma. But newcomer Anane, with roots in Portugal and the island nation of Cape Verde, takes the stage decked out like Diana Ross, then proceeds to get down like Lauryn Hill fronting the Fugees.

After a string of singles on dance indie Vega Records, her debut album, "Selections," is scheduled for a May release on Tommy Boy.

Framed around three covers well-known to the club community, but obscure to everyone else — ESG's "Standing in Line," Bunny Mack's "Let Me Love You" and Yoko Ono's "Walking on Thin Ice" — the set is otherwise original, segueing from thick club grooves to summery calypso to psychedelic dance-rock.

The album's first widely released single, "Shake Dat Booty," a reggae-inflected old-school rap produced by Tony Touch and Mr. Vegas, puts the girl back in control of the oft-sung across-the-dance floor flirtation.

"As soon as I put that track up on my MySpace page, girls started e-mailing me," she says. "The message is, 'I'll still shake it, but on my own terms."'

Combining earthiness with glamour and roots-deep house music knowledge with pop-wise diversity, Anane could be the first up-from-the-nightclub superstar since Madonna.

TINATIN (Liaison Music)

While most children were mastering the art of finger painting, 6-year-old Tinatin had wrapped her arms around a full spectrum of the arts: painting, writing, learning to speak six languages — and singing.

The native of the Republic of Georgia (then part of the Soviet Union) came to it naturally; her father was an architect and painter, her mother a classical pianist.

The family moved to Russia, where she studied classical voice. Then, as a young adult, she journeyed to London, where she aligned with producer Christopher Neil (Celine Dion, Mike & the Mechanics, Rod Stewart), who encouraged her to write songs and helped line up live gigs.

Today, at 23, the raven-haired, blue-eyed Tinatin (now a New Yorker) has released a CD independently on PureMix Records and gained interest from two major labels.

Her rallying first single, "We the Peoples," is based on the 1945 founding of the United Nations charter, another natural alliance stemming from her gig as a U.N. correspondent for the Russian media.

GALLOWS (Epitaph Records)

British music weekly NME recently named Frank Carter, the tattooed frontman of British punk band Gallows, "coolest person in rock" — a sure sign that 2008 should be his year.

American audiences got their first taste of the act's incendiary live shows on last year's 40-date Vans Warped tour. Having also supported Bad Religion in the fall, Gallows headlines 25 U.S. dates this month and next.

"It's been amazing," Carter says of the American reaction. "In us they see a little bit of that '80s hardcore scene. They seem proud that when we go over there we cover their bands — we do (Black Flag's) 'Nervous Breakdown,' and they really appreciate that."

The band's debut, "Orchestra of Wolves," originally released in 2006, was re-released last year by Warner Music U.K. via Gallows' own label, Black Envelope Records. Epitaph issued it stateside in July. "Punk rock is back," Epitaph president Brett Gurewitz says. "This is the band we've all been waiting for."

The album has sold 9,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan. Meanwhile, at home, Gallows' cover of "Staring at the Rude Bois" from British punk band the Ruts, featuring rapper Lethal Bizzle, became the band's first hit in December, peaking at No. 31.

LADY ANTEBELLUM (Capitol Nashville Records)

Music brought Hillary Scott, Charles Kelley and Dave Haywood — collectively known as Lady Antebellum — together. Well, music and some flirtation.

Scott, the daughter of Grammy-winning country singer Linda Davis, met Kelley (the younger brother of pop artist Josh Kelley) at a downtown Nashville music spot in May 2006 and told him she had been listening to his music on MySpace. Kelley asked for her number and promised they could write together. "A classic Nashville pickup line," he recalls now with a laugh.

Kelley introduced Scott to longtime friend and multi-instrumentalist Haywood, and chemistry emerged. A performance at a Nashville club in August 2006 made the trio realize that sparks were apparent.

"It only took one live performance to realize that whatever it was we were going to do, had to be done together," says Scott, who shares lead vocal duties and even duets with Kelley on some songs. A just-for-fun photo shoot in Civil War-era clothing led to the band's name.

Lady Antebellum's debut album is scheduled for a spring release. The group will tour with Martina McBride in January.

TYRA B (Warner Bros. Records)

The total package. That's the goal R&B singer Tyra B has been working toward since the age of 9.

Signed to Warner Bros. 22-year-old Tyra B is building plenty of buzz with "Givin' Me a Rush." She co-wrote the song, an engaging mid tempo that pays rhythmic homage to Michael Jackson's "Human Nature" and Paula Abdul's "Rush, Rush." With vocals that are an edgier cross between Janet Jackson and Aaliyah, plus dance moves to match, Tyra B is out to prove she's a triple threat.

"I have a deep passion for good R&B music," she says. "I just want to give that back. And it's not just about singing behind the mic. My whole thing is about giving a full show."

Born Tyra Bolling in Petersburg, Va., she caught an early break when a radio DJ in the state capitol of Richmond saw her perform at a 2004 high school talent show. He began playing her music, which sparked an indie hit ("Country Boy") and a coveted opening slot for 30 dates on the 2005 Destiny's Child tour. She also hit with another indie single, "Still in Love."

Now she's amping up for her debut album, the aptly titled "Past Due," which is set for a spring release.

MEREDITH ANDREWS (Word Records)

From Amy Grant to Darlene Zschech, Christian music has a rich history of influential female singer/songwriters, but recent charts have been dominated by male acts. Word aims to balance the format with Meredith Andrews' debut, "The Invitation," due April 29.

Influenced by such worship leaders as Zschech, Rita Springer and Christy Nockels, Andrews was involved in music in high school and college. Majoring in family and child development at Liberty University, her original plan was to work at an orphanage after graduation.

However, a pastor from Chicago's Harvest Bible Chapel heard her at Liberty and recruited Andrews to join his worship team. Like the platinum-selling band Casting Crowns, the singer plans to continue working at the church while attending to her burgeoning recording career.

Andrews has already landed a coveted slot opening 30 dates for Aaron Shust this spring. "I wasn't really looking for a record deal. It just fell in my lap," she says. "I'm so humbled by it all. It's obvious that it's the Lord's hand and not my own."

ESPERANZA SPALDING (Heads Up International Records)

At just 23, bassist/vocalist Esperanza Spalding has been turning heads in the last year, thanks to her 2006 debut CD "Junjo" on Barcelona label Ayva and her impressive sideman duties with such heroes as Stanley Clarke, Richard Bona, Herbie Hancock and Joe Lovano.

Spalding is also a marvel leading her own band. Whether exploding into vocalese or making her bass solo sound like a horn, she's a spark plug who dances as she grooves through a funked-up and rocked-out repertoire.

"It's been a natural evolution that musicians going places experience," says Spalding, who in November signed to Heads Up International, an imprint of Concord Music Group, for her first widely released CD. Produced by Terrence Blanchard, the set is due in May.

"The new album will be a crossover date that has the integrity of jazz," she says. "Only one song really swings; the rest are very groove-oriented."

Reuters/Billboard

Five TV shows to enrich the ears in 2008 (Reuters)

By Chuck Crisafulli 9 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES (Billboard) - TV is generally concerned with winning the eyes of an audience, but ears can be just as important these days. Network and cable shows continue to put a premium on the music behind the stories, with indie and even unsigned artists as likely to get heard as any giants of the back catalog.

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The Writers Guild of America strike, approaching its third month, still has production schedules up in the air, but here are some TV newcomers that might be worth a listen in 2008.

'QUARTERLIFE'

Scheduled to make its prime time debut February 18 on NBC, "Quarterlife" was initially developed by producers Marshall Herskovitz and Edward Zwick as a series of webisodes appearing on Quarterlife.com, a social networking site geared toward artists, writers and musicians. In a meta-digital twist, the show's narrative follows a cast of young creative types who are all using the site to begin or advance their careers. A wide range of indie music has been brought to the show, including Asher, Early Day Miners and Helen Stellar. Bands heard in the webisodes or the forthcoming hour-long drama can be tracked down through their own Quarterlife pages, which offer footage of band rehearsals, club shows and interviews. "We're trying to show where these bands are coming from and give them a personality outside the show other than just being a music cue," says Billy Kostka, music channel director for the site.

'TRUE BLOOD'

Producer Alan Ball made music a powerful part of the mix in "Six Feet Under," and he will likely do the same with his new HBO drama "True Blood." Based on the "Southern Vampire" book series, the show, set around a Louisiana roadhouse, follows the adventures of vampires who, thanks to advances in the manufacture of synthetic blood, no longer have to bite necks to survive. "The soundtrack will be swampy, bluesy and spooky," music supervisor Gary Calamar says. Jim White, Joseph Arthur and Slim Harpo will be heard, but Ball and Calamar are open to new sounds as well. "We definitely want to dig into the regional sound of Louisiana because there are so many great musicians there," says Calamar. "There are so many musicians still trying to restart or rebuild their careers down there — we want to offer some kind of opportunity to them."

'BACKYARDS AND BULLETS'

This NBC drama only made it to the pilot stage before the strike kicked in on Nov, 3, but if it gets back into production for '08, it will likely offer up the kind of mix of heartland Americana, classic rock and indie sounds that has worked well for "Friday Night Lights." The show centers on the criminal intrigues that lie just below the manicured surface of suburban Ridgeview, Wis. "A lot of the music reminds you where you are," music supervisor Linda Cohen says, "but because things are not as picture perfect as they seem, there are a lot of darker sounds too." The pilot worked the classic-to-indie range by including Lynyrd Skynyrd in the soundtrack and featuring an on-camera party scene performance by indie Chicago act Ezra Furman & the Harpoons.

'SWINGTOWN'

Bad behavior on shag carpeting will be explored in "Swingtown," which is set in the 1970s and features a cast of key-partying suburbanites. Created by Mike Kelley ("Jericho"), the show will make use of tracks by Gary Wright, Rita Coolidge and Captain & Tennille. In between the licensed tracks will be an original musical score by Liz Phair.

'ELI STONE'

"Eli Stone," a one-hour comedic drama debuting January 31 on ABC, follows the exploits of what might turn out to be the most disturbing creature of the new year — a lawyer with a heart. When the title character, played by Jonny Lee Miller, begins to feel he might be a prophet, he receives his celestial communications in an unusual form: via pop stars crooning past hits. The pilot has Stone interrupting an act of coitus to answer the call of "Faith" being sung by a very real George Michael. The pop singer has reportedly signed on to appear in several more episodes.

Reuters/Billboard

Eddie Murphy Rings in 2008 (E! Online)

Marcus Errico Tue Jan 1, 5:00 PM ET

Los Angeles (E! Online) - Looks like Eddie Murphy's made quick work of one New Year's resolution.

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The Shrek star swapped vows with fiancée Tracey Edmonds Tuesday on the Pacific Island of Bora Bora, People magazine reports.

The couple sealed the deal during a small, sunset ceremony on the beach. A barefoot Edmonds, sheathed in a custom number by the tandem of Sugia Nazel and Jill Baracci, marched the aisle to the strains of Gladys Knight's "Makings of You," per People.

The wedding party reportedly included R&B singer Johnny Gill, who served as Murphy's best man.

There was no immediate confirmation from Murphy's rep, Arnold Robinson, who has repeatedly declined to comment on the actor's personal life.

It was Edmonds' assistant who announced the couple's engagement in July.

This is the second marriage for both.

The 40-year-old Edmonds was previously hitched to Grammy-winning singer-producer Kenneth "Babyface" Edmonds. They divorced in June 2006 after being together for 13 years and having two children.

Murphy, 46, was previously married to Nicole Mitchell, with whom he has five children. They divorced in April 2006. In the months that followed, Murphy began dating Spice Girl Melanie Brown. He began dating Edmonds last fall, while Brown was pregnant with his child.

Brown gave birth to Angel Iris Murphy Brown. In a bit of karmic coincidence, the infant was born Apr. 3, sharing a birthday with her reluctant father.

 

Beatles for sale: rappers, brands turn to Fab Four (Reuters)

By Susan Butler and Paul Sexton 26 minutes ago

NEW YORK/LONDON (Billboard) - It's perfectly legal, but it will still seem to some listeners like the sound of someone making off with England's crown jewels.

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On rap collective Wu-Tang Clan's new single "The Heart Gently Weeps," a Santana-style rock guitar opening gives way to an almost celestial chorus of something very familiar. There, and throughout the track, is the unmistakable melody of George Harrison's timeless contribution to the Beatles' "White Album" from 1968: "While My Guitar Gently Weeps."

Now, the track is accompanied by Wu-Tang's trademark, uncompromising language, rapping out a gritty street story, even as Harrison's son Dhani plays along.

Meanwhile on the just-finished "Judas," Ja Rule is introducing the rap community to another incongruous musical motif. This is no unthinking appropriation of a classic act's creativity, as has sometimes been the case in rap. As he works at folding the original flavor into the hook of this midtempo treatise on "love, hate, jealousy and betrayal," he's doing so with the help of "Eleanor Rigby."

Forty years and more after the Beatles changed rock music forever, their songs have truly arrived in the 21st century as part of the rap/hip-hop art form — with the express permission of their publishers. Although there are hundreds of covers of "Yesterday," "Something" and the rest, this approach of "interpolation" — essentially rerecording a portion of a song — of the Beatles' compositions represents new access to the most famous catalogue in the world. These developments may ultimately signal a fresh attitude toward Beatles masters appearing in everything from commercials to movies.

CAN'T BUY ME LOVE

But don't expect to hear samples of the Beatles' original recordings, which remain strictly under lock and key, for now at least. Instead Sony/ATV, which owns all but a handful of the Lennon/McCartney copyrights, is allowing a select few to license some celebrated compositions and reference them in their own, newly recorded material.

The first lucky participants in these interpolations are acts from the arena of hip-hop and rap, with Ja Rule joining Common — who used "She's Leaving Home" on "Forever Begins" from his current album "Finding Forever" — and Jay-Z, who commandeered "I Will" on "Encore" from his 2003 "The Black Album" and "Numb/Encore" on his 2004 collaboration "Collision Curse" with Linkin Park. Meanwhile, Wu-Tang licensed rights from Harrisongs, George Harrison's publisher, for "While My Guitar Gently Weeps."

Ja Rule's "Eleanor Rigby"-appropriating "Judas" will appear on his next album, "The Mirror," due in the first quarter, while the Wu's Harrison-referencing "The Heart Gently Weeps" is the first single from its new album "8 Diagrams," which came out December 11. The song features a re-created backing track plus electric guitar by the Red Hot Chili Peppers' John Frusciante as well as acoustic contributions from Dhani Harrison.

Sony/ATV chief executive Martin Bandier says he's very much in favor of licensing Beatles songs for things that haven't been licensed in the past — under certain circumstances. Jay-Z, Common and Ja Rule received Sony/ATV's blessing because "they're prominent and well-regarded," Bandier says, but the way the song is used must also be acceptable.

"If Jay-Z interpolates a Beatles song and his album sells 2 million units, it doesn't change the economic structure" of the license deal, Bandier says. "It's wonderful to have that income, but we're more concerned about the possible repercussions of a bad message and something that we might not find tasteful."

The ever-sensitive nature of the Beatles' copyrights is reflected by the reluctance of several key players to participate in this story. Paul McCartney, Dhani Harrison, Jeff Jones (who became Apple Corps' new CEO in April) and EMI Music U.K. and Ireland chairman/CEO Tony Wadsworth were either "unavailable" or declined to comment.

In fact, Sony/ATV is not contractually required to obtain approval by John Lennon's widow, Yoko Ono, or by McCartney before it can license the compositions, but Bandier says he believes there is a "moral obligation" to speak with them about licensing the songs. In the internecine history of the Beatles' publishing, Lennon and McCartney effectively lost control of the group's song rights even while the group was still a recording entity, in 1969.

That was when Northern Songs, the company established six years earlier solely to publish their joint compositions by English publisher Dick James and Beatles manager Brian Epstein, was sold to British media tycoon Lew Grade's ATV Music. Ownership of ATV subsequently passed to Australian entrepreneur Robert Holmes a Court and then, in 1985, to Michael Jackson.

In 1995, Sony came into the picture, forming a joint venture with trusts formed by Jackson, creating a new entity: Sony/ATV Music Publishing. That publishing company includes the Northern Songs catalogue that contains 259 copyrights by Lennon and McCartney. These songs essentially represent everything recorded under the Beatles name by Lennon and McCartney, except for five songs: their first two U.K. singles, "Love Me Do"/"P.S. I Love You" and "Please Please Me"/"Ask Me Why," and "Penny Lane," "gifted" by Jackson to Holmes a Court under a specific provision of Jackson's purchase of the ATV catalogue.

THE LONG AND WINDING ROAD

When it comes to the Beatles' original studio recordings, controlled by EMI-Capitol Records, permission is another matter. After Nike used the Beatles' original of "Revolution" in 1987 for its "Revolution in Motion" TV commercial campaign (in a licensing deal worth $250,000 to the label, according to Nike at the time), Apple Corps and Apple Records sued Nike, its advertising agency and EMI-Capitol for $15 million.

Paul Russell, former chairman of Sony/ATV Music Publishing, recalls, "Once Sony/ATV was formed, any requests for those songs came to Sony/ATV and not to Michael Jackson.

"(When) those requests came in, serious requests for serious money, for products that we knew were noncontentious, they would come to me and we would form a view, and then we'd go to Michael, even though he didn't have the right to approve it, and say, 'We've received this request, we think it's the right price and an OK use, what do you think?' If somebody had come back to us, either Michael or the Apple people, and said, 'We really don't want you to do this,' we probably wouldn't have done it."

According to a 1988 New York Times report, Apple's attorney Leonard Marks said that "Ono and the (then) three surviving Beatles each own 25% of Apple and that the company required 'unanimity among the four Beatles' interests in order to act."'

In 1989, it was announced that the dispute had been resolved, in a formal statement that all outstanding lawsuits between the Beatles/Apple and EMI-Capitol– some of them dating back 20 years — had been settled. The parties agreed that no further Beatles recordings would be licensed for commercial use, although the Nike commercial can now be seen on YouTube.

Brian Southall, author of "Northern Songs: The True Story of the Beatles' Publishing Empire," published in August in the United States by Omnibus Press, says, "There aren't a lot of Lennon/McCartney songs that appear in adverts since the Nike ad. And you'll never, ever find the Beatles singing as a background to a TV commercial. You could take a song and get it recorded by 'A. N. Other.' But Michael (Jackson)'s attitude in the early days was, 'These are the greatest songs ever recorded, and they ain't gonna end up on a cornflakes ad."'

Nevertheless, Ono was quoted by Time magazine at the time as saying the "Revolution" commercial was "making John's music accessible to a new generation." That's exactly how Bandier feels today about actively promoting the Beatles via licensing, and others agree that current commercial realities make the eventual appearance of their original recordings in commercials and films much more likely.

The type of licensing that's been the most contentious for music purists is for commercials. But a license for a Lennon/McCartney song — albeit in a cover version — not only drives revenue for the advertiser, publisher and writers, it can convey a message in the most powerful way.

Rob Kaplan, director of music production for New York-based advertising agency Mcgarrybowen, has been involved with three commercials using Lennon/McCartney songs licensed from Sony/ATV. In 1998, Europe-based Philips Consumer Electronics had very little brand recognition in the United States, Kaplan says. It was using the tag line, "Let's make things better," and wanted an anthemic song to unify its products and create a corporate identity.

"They needed something that was a big statement, that could cut across generations, was instantly recognizable but also kind of cool and clever," Kaplan says. Since the Beatles recording wasn't available, they had Gomez, then an emerging English band signed to Virgin, record the chorus to "Getting Better," the last seven seconds of which played at the end of every Philips commercial for about three years.

"We literally got thousands of requests from consumers wanting to know where to buy the song," Kaplan says.

Mcgarrybowen subsequently licensed Rufus Wainwright's recording of "Across the Universe" for Canon digital cameras in 2004, as well as a version of "All You Need Is Love" for Chase Bank's 2006 campaign for rewards programs and customized credit cards with partners including Marriott Hotels, Disney and Borders Books & Music.

"What makes a Beatles song special in advertising is that it's one of the few things that you know everybody is going to 'get,' no matter what," Kaplan says. "The lyrics are really clear. There are very few things that cut across every demographic imaginable and are still special. The Beatles really are. There's no comparison."

Such campaigns are even rarer in the Beatles' homeland but in 2000, U.K. bank Halifax used a cover of "Help!" in a six-month TV campaign.

"To get something as anthemic as 'Help!' was a massive coup," recalls Tim Male, the company's head of advertising and media. "We were very surprised when we got it, on the basis that artists like that aren't interested, or the process or cost of doing it makes it prohibitive.

"The thought of a Beatles track being used in anything is abhorrent to certain people," Male adds, "and you've got to be mindful of that."

ALL YOU NEED IS … LUVS?

Sony/ATV U.K. says that no applications for British commercial licenses of Beatles songs are in the works, and that the company will take its lead on potential recorded interpolations from the U.S. company. A London representative for Universal Music Publishing Group, which administers "Please Please Me" and "Ask Me Why," says, "We're very selective over any requests and uses of the songs. We would consider commercials if appropriate."

Bandier notes that the publisher's decision to grant a license for a Beatles song can be informed by whether it will take the composition to a new audience. Hence Luvs Diapers' current campaign, which proclaims, "All You Need Is Luvs."

"The thought and the song were ideal for morning TV, when young mothers are watching," Bandier says, adding that the commercial was being aired to young parents who may not know the song or have a sense of the theme. "We thought it was very tasteful."

Since Bandier joined Sony/ATV in March after leaving EMI Music Publishing — which holds rights in Lennon's solo compositions — he has strived to ensure that these classic songs reach the next generation of listeners in a myriad of ways, not just from their parents talking about them.

Seemingly the most successful venture to date is the Las Vegas show "Love," a joint production of Cirque du Soleil and Apple Corps using the original Beatles recordings, remixed by George Martin and son Giles. Since the show opened in June 2006, it has drawn more than 600,000 spectators and generated music publishing fees nearing $500,000 per month, according to a source close to the show. Worldwide sales of the accompanying "Love" album, released this time last year, stand at 5 million units, according to EMI in London.

Elsewhere, Beatles lyrics are appearing on clothing, after Sony/ATV sealed a deal with Lyric Culture authorizing use of the lyrics on jeans, T-shirts and other items. The publisher is negotiating other merchandising deals.

On the big screen, Julie Taymor's "Across the Universe" — with a plot based on the Beatles songbook and a soundtrack featuring cover versions of Beatles classics — was released this fall. It grossed about $24 million in the United States and Canada. (The soundtrack album also just received a Grammy Award nomination for best compilation soundtrack album for motion picture, television or other visual media.)

On TV, a special edition of NBC's "The Singing Bee" was recently dedicated to Lennon and McCartney, while the sixth season's final episode of "American Idol" was a Lennon, McCartney and the Beatles special, with the contestants all singing Beatles songs.

"In all of the years that 'American Idol' has been around, there's never been a Lennon and McCartney song performed on that show," Bandier says. "I thought it was preposterous. We were missing an audience of tens of millions of people.

"It's important that the world knows this music," Bandier adds. "It just can't be hidden forever, otherwise you're going to miss generations of music listeners."

Reuters/Billboard

Radiohead frontman takes aim at EMI chief (Reuters)

30 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - Radiohead has hit out at the chief of its former label after a news report claimed the rock band rejected a 3 million pound ($5.95 million) advance for its new album and demanded the rights to some of its older albums.

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According to the report, published last Friday by The Times of London, Radiohead's demands to EMI Group chairman Guy Hands totaled more than 10 million pounds ($19.8 million).

In addition to the advance, the Times said the band also wanted a 3 million pound international marketing budget for the album, "In Rainbows," while the reversion of the rights to its previous two albums would have cost EMI 4 million pounds ($7.9 million) in future earnings.

The paper quoted an EMI spokesman as saying, "Radiohead were demanding an extraordinary amount of money and we did not believe that our other artists should have to subsidize their gains."

It also quoted the band's manager, Bryce Edge, as saying, "We were not seeking a big advance payment, or a guaranteed marketing spend as discussions never got that far."

The band's "extremely upset" frontman, Thom Yorke, took to the band's Web site (http://www.radiohead.com) on Monday to deny that it wanted "a load of cash" from EMI.

"What we wanted was some control over our work and how it was used in the future by them. That seemed reasonable to us, as we cared about it a great deal," Yorke wrote.

He said Hands was not interested. "So, neither were we. We made the sign of the cross and walked away. Sadly."

Radiohead went on to release "In Rainbows," on the Web several months ago, and allowed fans to pay whatever they wanted to download it. Physical versions of the album were released in stores this week.

Directing his anger at Hands, Yorke added: "To be digging up such bull


, or more politely airing yer dirty laundry in public, seems a very strange way for the head of an international record label to be proceeding."

Representatives for EMI in London and New York were not available to comment Tuesday.

Hands' buyout firm Terra Firma Capital Partners agreed to buy EMI in May for 2.4 billion pounds ($4.8 billion). The financier has warned artists they could be dropped if they do not work hard enough for the company.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman)