U2’s Bono presses for French aid (AP)

17 minutes ago

PARIS - Rock star Bono pressed French leader Nicolas Sarkozy to increase aid to developing nations, the aid advocacy group DATA said.

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The organization, co-founded by Bono, front man of the U2 rock group, has urged France to raise development assistance to 0.7 percent of gross national income by 2012 as agreed earlier. In 2006, French aid stood at 0.31 percent of gross national income, DATA said.

“The president admitted it would be very, very hard, but France would keep her word,” the statement quoted Bono as saying Tuesday following the meeting.

DATA’s statement cites an October parliamentary report showing France’s estimated overseas development assistance would be 0.35 percent of gross national income in 2007 and would remain at 0.35 percent in 2008.

Dionne Warwick’s jewels stolen in Rome hotel (Reuters)

15 minutes ago

ROME (Reuters) - Thieves stole valuables worth more than $100,000, including a diamond ring and a Rolex watch, from pop singer Dionne Warwick's room in a posh Rome hotel, Italian newspapers reported on Wednesday.

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The robbers made off with two rings, a necklace, the watch and a pair of earrings left on a night table while the five-time Grammy Award winner was preparing for a concert in Rome on Monday, La Repubblica newspaper said.

The robbery occurred in the same room at the luxurious Hotel De Russie where actress Cameron Diaz encountered a pair of thieves seven years ago, newspapers said.

Warwick, best known for pop hits such as "Do You Know the Way to San Jose?," "I Say A Little Prayer" and "That's What Friends Are For," is touring in Italy this month.

Reuters/Nielsen

Radiohead’s “Rainbows” yields pot of gold (Reuters)

By Dean Goodman 31 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES (Reuters) - British rock band Radiohead scored its second No. 1 album on the U.S. pop charts on Wednesday with a release that was initially sold on the Internet under a revolutionary "name-your-own-price" system.

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"In Rainbows" also topped the charts in Britain, Canada, France, Japan and Ireland, a representative for the group said.

The critically acclaimed album sold a relatively modest 122,000 copies during its first official week in U.S. stores, according to Nielsen SoundScan data for the week ended January 6. It sold an additional 10,000 copies the week before, when some retailers put it on shelves ahead of its January 1 release date.

Retail sales also were cannibalized by Radiohead's decision to allow fans to download the album from the group's Web site in October. Radiohead has not disclosed Internet sales or the average price paid, subjects of considerable debate within the music industry.

After British music magazine NME reported in September that fans appeared willing to pay $10 for each download, the Wall Street Journal chided the "anti-corporate and anti-materialistic" band for potentially generating a 66 percent profit margin.

But digital measurement service ComScore.com estimated in November that fans paid an average of about $6 for the album, and that 62 percent of downloaders paid nothing. Radiohead countered that the ComScore data was "wholly inaccurate" and that it was impossible for outside organizations to have accurate sales figures.

Radiohead's last album, "Hail to the Thief," debuted at No. 3 in 2003 with first-week sales of almost 300,000 copies. The group previously went to No. 1 in 2000 with "Kid A," which started off selling 207,000 copies.

"In Rainbows" marks Radiohead's first album since it declined to renew its contract with EMI Group Plc. It was distributed in the United States by ATO Records Group, a label co-founded by rock musician Dave Matthews.

Radiohead is feuding with EMI after London newspaper The Times claimed the band rejected a $6 million advance for "In Rainbows." Frontman Thom Yorke, describing himself as "extremely upset" about the report, took to the Web last week to deny that the band wanted "a load of cash" from EMI.

Meanwhile, R&B singers claimed the next spots on the U.S. album chart. Last week's champ, Mary J. Blige's "Growing Pains," fell to No. 3. Alicia Keys' "As I Am" remained at No. 2.

After suffering a 15 percent slide in total album sales last year, the music business is off to a weak start in 2008. Unit sales were down 3.7 percent from the same week last year, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

(Reporting by Dean Goodman; Editing by Steve Gorman and Cynthia Osterman)

It’s Slammer Time for Beanie (E! Online)

Josh Grossberg Wed Jan 9, 8:35 AM ET

Los Angeles (E! Online) - Beanie Sigel has just crapped out.

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The trouble magnet and Philly hip-hopster was found guilty Wednesday of a parole violation and sentenced to one day in federal prison for going on a gambling spree in Atlantic City and hanging with a known felon.

In addition to the brief stint in lockup, U.S. District Court Judge R. Barclay Surrick also extended Sigel's supervised release by another 18 months, the first six of which the rapper will be required to spend in a halfway house.

During those six months, Sigel can pursue his work in Philadelphia by day but cannot travel to promote his latest album, The Solution.

Sigel got into his latest mess when authorities read in the Philadelphia Daily News about a roadie he took last month to A.C.'s Tropicana Casino—a violation of travel restrictions under the terms of his probation for a prior gun conviction. Authorities also accused Sigel (real name Dwight Grant) of spending time last month with ex-con Terrence Butler.

Surrick already extended the rapper's probation in 2007 due to his contact with a felon.

The 33-year-old rapper, a protégé of Jay-Z, denied being with Butler on Dec. 3, saying he was at a studio giving media interviews. However, a probation officer testified Wednesday that he saw the pair together at the home of Sigel's mother.

"I'm human, but I'm working on my mistakes," the emcee told the judge.

Surrick could have sentenced the emcee to three months in the pen, but he decided to go easier on Sigel because the rapper had shown a desire to turn his life around. The judge specifically cited Sigel's appearance in public service announcements denouncing violence, marching alongside Bill Cosby to protest the city's rising crime rate and lecturing inner-city students about staying in school and making good grades.

But that didn't stop the judge from holding him accountable.

"If they're looking at you as a role model, you've got to do the right thing," Surrick said.

After the hearing, Beanie was remanded into the custody of U.S. Marshals and ordered to spend the rest of Wednesday behind bars before heading to the halfway house Thursday.

Sigel's lawyer, Fortunato N. Perri, could not be reached for comment, but he told the Philadelphia Inquirer his client was "prepared to accept the consequences of his actions."

"The court has always been more than fair in how it handled this matter, and this sentence will give Beanie the opportunity to continue in the entertainment business," Perri said.

 

Foo Fighters dig deeper with ‘Echoes’ (AP)

By MELINDA NEWMAN, For The Associated Press 6 minutes ago

LOS ANGELES - Even though she’s a good few years away from taking stubby pencil to paper herself, Dave Grohl’s baby daughter Violet gets full credit for influencing her daddy’s writing style.

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For the Foo Fighters’ founder and frontman, the 2006 birth of his first child added a personal, often confessional tone to his lyrics.

“Having a child made me feel like a superman in a way because I had to be,” says Grohl, who turns 39 this month. “Just as I can’t be afraid to ride the Spiderman roller coaster at Magic Mountain when it’s time, I can’t be scared of writing things that I really feel. There are a lot of things that I kept myself from saying over the years.”

Indeed, the Foo Fighters’ current album, “Echoes, Silence, Patience & Grace,” includes some of Grohl’s most revealing, introspective lyrics such as on “Stranger Things Have Happened,” an intimate look at marriage.

It’s clear both fans and critics are responding to “Echoes.” The album has sold more than 530,000 copies in the U.S. since its September release and received five Grammy nominations including a coveted album of the year nod. The first single, “The Pretender,” took up residence atop Billboard’s Modern Rock chart, spending a record 17 weeks at No. 1. The group will play the song at the 50th annual Grammy Awards on Feb. 10.

“Echoes” is the group’s sixth studio album, and is the follow-up to 2006’s live acoustic CD “Skin and Bones.” As drummer Taylor Hawkins explains, the album “covers everything we’ve ever done in a weird way, sometimes in one song.” The tunes on “Echoes” range from the hard rock of “The Pretender” to the pop sheen of the second single “Long Road to Ruin.”

However, the CD also takes the band in new musical directions, in addition to the added lyrical depth. Grohl’s wife gave him a piano for his birthday a few years ago, which spurred him to write the mid-tempo, Beatles-esque “Statues.” He also takes on bluegrass-tinged country with “The Beaconsfield Miners.”

Grohl, the Foos’ primary songwriter, wrote the song as a tribute to two trapped miners in Australia who requested Foo Fighters’ music delivered to them on an iPod. It wasn’t until that incident that he realized the impact the Foos’ music could have.

“For years, I’ve had people come up to me and say, ‘That album helped me through a really difficult time’ or say ‘This song was the first dance at our wedding,’ but something like the Beaconsfield incident, that was so much heavier. It was about survival,” he says.

It’s an idea he still has difficulty getting used to.

“The music that changed my life was made by people that I consider heroes,” he says. “So it’s hard for me to think the same of myself because that would be a little weird, wouldn’t it?”

“Echoes” was recorded with Gil Norton, the producer of 1997’s “The Colour and the Shape.” The Brit is best known for his work with the Pixies, Throwing Muses, Dashboard Confessional and Jimmy Eat World.

Norton says Grohl was looking to continue the acoustic direction the band had ventured into in recent years.

“One of the things Dave really wanted to do was to combine the acoustic album that he’d done coming off the acoustic tour — the bigger band, string players — and build things from acoustic songs into rock songs. That’s the sort of dynamic he wanted,” he says.

But Hawkins admits that he worried whether Norton could bring the right dynamic to the Foos, which also includes guitarist Chris Shiflett and bassist Nate Mendel.

“The first record he did with the band, the drummer quit,” Hawkins says, referring to William Goldsmith. “I heard he was a complete work horse and a tyrant and nothing’s good enough (but) he was a hard-working guy and he did work us hard.”

Norton wasn’t the only hard-worker — he calls Grohl “possibly the hardest-working man in rock. I swear to God, he never stops. He is so driven.”

Grohl doesn’t deny he’s a grateful workaholic: “I’m a high school drop-out; I was working odd jobs in a furniture warehouse and (stuff) like that. To be lucky enough to have the greatest job in the world, why wouldn’t you want to do it every day?”

And now, as the band prepares to hit the road Jan. 16 for a nationwide tour, Grohl is ready to be on stage, a sensation he compares to being “a ringleader of this circus.” Still, he says he has tempered his work habits since Violet entered the picture.

“”I used to be able to say there’s nothing I’d rather do than (play), but finally there’s something I’d rather be doing,” he says.

Grohl set a two-week limit on time away from his family. After being separated for 14 days, “I said I can’t take any more than that. That’s too much; so it’s just a whole new way of life for me.”

The same goes for Hawkins, who has a new baby boy. “You just make concessions,” he says of balancing career and home life. “But let’s face it, we’re all so blessed in the position we’re in, getting to make music every day and paid way too much for what we do, but there’s little prices to pay.”

Grohl has developed a reputation as the most genial of rockers, and after enough drama as Nirvana’s drummer to last a life time, he prides himself on being Mr. Dependable.

“Our band is seen as one of those bands that you know is going to show up and do the gig and I don’t have a problem with that, I swear to God. I can understand the allure of the (screwed)-up, unpredictable nightmare musician, but it’s a lot easier to go make a record and play gigs and, you know, be a dude.”

And to continue to play with his band mates in what once seemed to be a finite future.

“I never imagined the Foo Fighters lasting more than a few albums and now I can’t imagine it ending,” Grohl says. “I really always thought there was going to be this clear line that the band would end and I would start doing all the things that I wanted to do, like have children or stay at home and be a father, but I’m starting to realize that they can co-exist.”

___

On the Net:

http://www.foofighters.com