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Fire up the DeLorean: Back to the Future musical planned

Written By Unknown on Jumat, 31 Januari 2014 | 22.20

Director Robert Zemeckis is literally going back into the past for his next project — a stage musical of Back to the Future.

Producers said Thursday night that a show adapted from the sci-fi comedy franchise starring Michael J. Fox will open in London's West End in 2015, the 30th anniversary of the film. A Broadway run is a possibility if the new musical flies as well as the film's specially equipped DeLorean.

The new musical will have a book by Zemeckis, Bob Gale and Jamie Lloyd, and new music and lyrics by composer Alan Silvestri and songwriter and record producer Glen Ballard. Lloyd also will direct.

'The production will include illusions, skateboarding and many other surprises that will capture the spirit of the film but freshly interpret it for a new audience'- Jamie Lloyd, co-writer

"The production will include illusions, skateboarding and many other surprises that will capture the spirit of the film but freshly interpret it for a new audience," Lloyd said in a statement Friday.

In the 1985 film, Marty McFly becomes a human guinea pig who travels back to his hometown in 1955. Once there, he gets caught up in the soap opera lives of his own teenage parents, including his mom who develops a crush on her future son.

The film was written by Zemeckis and Gale and had plenty of music, including the Huey Lewis and the News theme tune The Power of Love and Marty McFly's futuristic rendition of Johnny B. Goode.

The film, which co-starred Christopher Lloyd, Crispin Glover and Lea Thompson, was so successful that it spawned two more sequels, Back to the Future Part II in 1989 and Back to the Future Part III in 1990.

The new musical will join such recent Gen X screen-to-stage remakes as Ghost, Little Shop of HorrorsFlashdance, Dirty Dancing, Big, Legally Blonde, The Wedding Singer, Dirty Rotten Scoundrels and Elf.

Oscar-winner Zemeckis has directed all Back to the Future films, as well as Who Framed Roger Rabbit, Forrest Gump, The Polar Express and Flight.

Silvestri has scored many of Zemeckis' films, including Romancing the Stone, Forrest Gump and Cast Away. Ballard, a six-time Grammy Award winner, co-wrote and produced Jagged Little Pill for Alanis Morissette and co-wrote the music for the stage musical adaptation of Ghost.

Lloyd's credits include Cyrano de Bergerac on Broadway, The Duchess of Malfi at the Old Vic and She Stoops to Conquer at the National Theatre. Gale, a frequent Zemeckis collaborator, has also written comic books, including issues of Batman.

Set and costume designs will be by Soutra Gilmour, illusions by Paul Kieve, lighting design by Jon Clark, and musical supervision by Alan Williams. Andrew Willis will be skateboard consultant.

The producers of the "Back to the Future" musical will include Steven Spielberg's Amblin Entertainment, Colin Ingram, Universal Stage Productions, Donovan Mannato and CJ E&M.


22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

How Justin Bieber can turn a fall from grace into a rise to the top

It's already shaping up to be a bad year for Justin Bieber — just one month into 2014, and the Canadian pop star has already been arrested twice, in two different countries, and now faces charges for driving under the influence, speeding and assault.  

But some experts say the 19-year-old's apparent fall from grace could actually turn into a rise to the top — as long as he plays his cards right.

Mark Sherwin, president of Toronto-based crisis management firm CorpWorld, says that celebrities behaving badly is nothing new.

"We've seen mug shots for years," he says. "They're certainly usually not very flattering and they come back and haunt that person, it seems, for years and years and years."

While Sherwin says he doesn't believe most celebrities would intentionally go out and break the law just for the attention, he says that once they find themselves in a bad situation, there are ways to make the best of it — and maybe even come out stronger.

"After the fact — once you have been charged with something, once there's been an incident — I think the best way to use or leverage that exposure is to become very public about it," he says, adding that showing remorse is key.

Film Robert Downey Jr

Actor Robert Downey Jr. was open about his struggles with alcohol and his time in prison, and eventually went on to become one of Hollywood's biggest and most-liked stars. (Joel Ryan/Invision/Associated Press)

"Be contrite, have some contrition, and say, 'You know what? I've kind of messed up here. I've goofed and I'm going to turn it around,'" Sherwin says. "People might really respect that."  

Robert Downey Jr. is one notable example of a celebrity who managed to turn his life around and boost his image in the process. After years of arrests, several stints in rehab and even a year in a California state prison on drug charges, the Iron Man actor eventually made a career comeback, even topping the Forbes list of highest-paid actors last year.

Throughout the journey, he was candid with the public and the press about his struggles.

"Years ago, he had drug problems and serious problems, but he seems to have really turned things around," says Sherwin. "He was very public with that going into rehab."

Building a bad boy brand

Some cynics, however, speculate that Bieber's eyebrow-raising behaviour over the past year, along with his most recent brushes with the law, are all part of an attempt to shed his squeaky clean pop star image and slip into the role of the dangerous bad boy.

Some have also pointed out that Bieber's once-dominant career may be on the downswing. His latest album, Journals, failed to crack the U.S. Billboard music charts, and his recent documentary film, Believe, only earned $6 million at the box office — far below the $73 million his first film, Never Say Never, took in.

After turning himself in at a Toronto police station Wednesday night for assault charges, a video appeared on his Instagram account promoting his latest music video. 

'If you want to make yourself seem older and more dangerous, you don't get caught for crimes that 10-year-olds do, like egging a house.'- Bob Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture

But if all this is in fact a marketing ploy, some experts say he and his team are going about it all wrong.

"If that's what they're doing on purpose, they're doing a bad job of it," Bob Thompson, director of the Bleier Center for Television and Popular Culture at Syracuse University, said in an interview with CBC News Network.

"If you want to make yourself seem older and more dangerous, you don't get caught for crimes that 10-year-olds do, like egging a house," he said.

But just like Miley Cyrus, who infamously shed her child star persona with a raunchy awards show performance, Bieber will also have to find a way to transition into adulthood, Thompson says.

"I can understand how at some point, Justin Bieber, as he grows up, will have to change his image," Thompson said. "And we're going to have to see how Bieber does it. Will he make music like Justin Timberlake does that shows his aging persona? Who knows."

He says the next three to six months are key in determining the future of Bieber's career and his best bet is to lay low, stay out of the news and regroup — which, Thompson admits, could be a bit of a challenge for the high-profile star.

"If Justin Bieber's manager sent him to his room for two months, there would be photographers outside his room taking pictures of him."

Mythology of Justin Bieber and Rob Ford

The Grid's online editor Stuart Berman, on the other hand, thinks a rebranding is in order. "If anyone could use a bad boy makeover, it's the Biebs," he says.

Despite the scrutiny and overwhelming media attention of his recent scrapes with the law, Berman thinks Bieber's antics won't do any harm to his career in the long run.

"Unfortunately, as we've seen with the likes of R. Kelly and Chris Brown, it doesn't seem to matter what you do in the eyes of the law," Berman says. "There will always be a vocal contingent of fans that will have your back, where morality doesn't really play into their fandom."

ford bieber

The Grid's online editor Stuart Berman says Rob Ford and Justin Bieber's bad behaviour might actually work to build a following around them. (Canadian Press/Getty Images)

Just after Bieber's arrest for speeding and DUI in Miami last week, the pop star's legion of fans, called Beliebers, took to the internet to voice their support. #FreeBieber quickly became a top-trending hashtag on Twitter, and a photo he posted on Instagram of his release from jail prompted thousands of messages of encouragement.

In fact, Berman says Bieber's behaviour may even win him a kind of cult following, much like Toronto Mayor Rob Ford, whose approval rating went up after police confirmed there was a video that allegedly shows him smoking crack cocaine.

"We see it with Rob Ford — the same kind of effect, where the more bad stuff you do, it kind of builds a mythology around you," Berman says. "People always like to root for the outlaw and the underdog."

Berman says that as long as Bieber keeps performing and producing music that his fans like, it won't matter if he gets into a bit of trouble every once in a while.

"If the behaviour really starts to overshadow the musical output and his ability to perform that's when I think people will lose their patience," Berman says. "But if he can maintain the loutish lifestyle and keep pumping out the hits, I think for the most parts the fans probably won't care."

Recalling Paul McCartney's 1980 arrest for marijuana possession and Britney Spears' public meltdown's in the mid-2000s, Berman thinks these kinds of antics can often turn out to be nothing more than blips in a career.

"It's kind of what people expect out of our celebrities," Berman says. "We want celebrities to live these fast-paced, glamorous, exciting lives and that involves getting arrested from time to time."


22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

Super Bowl art wager modified after B.C. band objects

The Seattle Art Museum is modifying its friendly Super Bowl bet with the Denver Art Museum after objections from a British Columbia First Nations band.

The director of the Seattle museum, Kimerly Rorshchach, said Wednesday the Nuxalk Nation asked it to withdraw the offer of a raven mask, and it's doing so in respect for their wishes. The band at Bella Coola, B.C. says the mask is a sacred ceremonial item.

Super Bowl Broncos Fever Football

The Nuxalk Nation band in Bella Coola, B.C. objected to the Nuxalk raven forehead mask, considered a sacred ceremonial item, being included in the wager between the two museums. (Elaine Thompson/Associated Press)

"We have the greatest respect for the Nuxalk's art and culture and intended the Forehead Mask to be a cultural exchange with the Denver region," Rorschach said in a statement.

"The Nuxalk Nation asked us to withdraw the offer in conjunction with the Super Bowl and we are doing so in respect for their wishes."

In its place, the Seattle Art Museum is offering Sound of Waves, a six-panelled, 1901 Japanese painted screen by Tsuji Kako depicting an eagle on a seashore.

The Denver museum is putting up The Broncho Buster, a Frederic Remington bronze of a cowboy on a bucking bronco.

"Sound of Waves is a masterpiece from our great Japanese art collection and a reflection of Seattle's close connection to Asia," said Rorschach. "But we are still confident that The Bronco Buster will be heading to Seattle."

The museum in the city losing Sunday's Seahawks-Broncos football game will send art to the winning city for a three-month exhibit.

Super Bowl art wager

Denver Art Museum director Christoph Heinrich is seen with the Frederic Remington bronze statue The Broncho Buster, which is still part of the Super Bowl wager. (Brennan Linsley/Associated Press)


22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

FILM REVIEW: Labor Day

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CBC News Posted: Jan 31, 2014 9:43 AM ET Last Updated: Jan 31, 2014 9:45 AM ET

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Jason Reitman on Labor Day 5:23

Jason Reitman on Labor Day 5:23

Filmmaker Jason Reitman drops the sharp and abrasive feel of earlier films such as Juno and Thank You for Smoking in his latest movie, Labor Day.

Based on the coming of age novel by Joyce Maynard and shot in a nostalgic, summertime haze, the drama featuring Kate Winslet, Josh Brolin and young actor Gattlin Griffith turns into The Notebook for adults, says CBC film reviewer Eli Glasner.

Not unlike the peach pies Brolin's escaped convict character makes in the film, Labor Day feels a little rich, crusty on the outside and surprisingly mushy in the middle.

In the attached videos, watch Glasner's review of Labor Day and his chat with Reitman about the film.

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Seattle, Denver museums put art up in Super Bowl wager

Written By Unknown on Kamis, 30 Januari 2014 | 22.19

While the mayors of Seattle and Denver have salmon and green chile on the line, the directors of the art museums in the two cities have put up iconic statues in a wager on the NFL championships.

Christoph Heinrich, director of the Denver Art Museum, said the fever surrounding Super Bowl Sunday is an opportunity for both cities to show off what makes them special, on and off the field.

If Seattle were to win, Heinrich said Monday that he will send a Frederic Remington bronze of a cowboy on a bucking bronco to Seattle for three months. Heinrich calls the small statue, which is so detailed that wind seems to be ruffling the horse's mane and the rider's moustache, "one of the stars of our American West collection."

'There's an emotional connection to art, like there can be for sports'- Kimerly Rorschach, Seattle Art Museum

Kimerly Rorschach of the Seattle museum said in a telephone interview that when the idea of a bet was raised, she immediately thought of a Remington bronco.

"I want the trophy of their mascot," she said. "Then, I thought about what's the equivalent in our collection."

Super Bowl Broncos Fever Football

For the Super Bowl wager, Seattle Art Museum director Kimerly Rorschach is putting up this Nuxalk raven forehead mask, reminiscent of a "Seahawk" and embellished in black, blue and red paint, from its Northwest Coast Native American art collection. (Elaine Thompson/Associated Press)

If the Broncos win, Rorschach will send an elegantly carved Seahawk mask, embellished in black, blue and red paint, from her museum's North Coast Native American collection to Denver for three months.

"But of course, it's not going there," Rorschach said in the genteel museum director's equivalent of trash-talking.

The losing museum will pay for the costs of packing and shipping the piece to be loaned. That would include a courier to accompany the bronze, Heinrich said. But he said he wasn't thinking about shipping logistics "since we'll win."

Mayoral bets also include art

In the event of a Broncos win, Seattle Mayor Ed Murray said he would send Denver Mayor Michael B. Hancock salmon, Dungeness crab, a bicycle made by Rodriguez Bicycles in Seattle and auction off a blown-glass piece by internationally known Seattle artist Dale Chihuly to benefit a Denver program for the homeless. Murray will also wear Broncos pajamas in public if the Broncos win.

Hancock is putting up green chile, Denver's favorite fiery stew; a hoodie; ball cap; and handmade skis. Should the Broncos lose, Hancock will also auction off a Denver-themed item to support the Seattle-based Lifelong AIDS Alliance and wear an ensemble put together by the Lifelong AIDS Alliance thrift shop.

Denver is encouraging all business owners to light up their buildings in orange and blue. Even the home of the Colorado Supreme Court has "Go Broncos" banners, and a buffalo statue at the history museum is wearing a giant Peyton Manning jersey. Airport trains are playing a recorded message from cornerback Champ Bailey asking them to "Unite in Orange."

Blue and white flags in groups of 12 — representing the "12th man," the fans — are sprouting around Seattle.

Off-limits pieces

Denver's museum director Heinrich jokes that he would have gone for a bigger bet if his museum, instead of the city, owned Mustang, a giant, red-eyed, blue horse sculpture that will be familiar to anyone who has driven near Denver's airport.

An eerie mystique has grown up around the piece since its sculptor, Luis Jimenez, was crushed and killed by the horse during its construction.

In return, Heinrich suggested Seattle put up Jonathan Borofsky's Hammering Man, a metal kinetic sculpture that towers over the art museum there. Seattle's Rorschach chuckled at the idea of offering a piece so central to the museum's identity.

"There's an emotional connection to art, like there can be for sports," she said.


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Fernand Leduc, Quebec abstract painter, dies at 97

Quebec painter Fernand Leduc died in Montreal on Tuesday at the age of 97 after a bout with cancer.

The abstract painter was a signatory of the controversial 1948 anti-establishment and anti-religion manifesto Refus global, or Total Refusal, along with artistic contemporaries such as Paul-Émile Borduas and Jean-Paul Riopelle.

Leduc's contributions to the province were invaluable, Quebec Premier Pauline Marois said Tuesday.

"Fernand Leduc figures among those who contributed to bringing Quebec into modernity," she said after learning of the painter's death.

Born in Montreal on July 4, 1916 and a graduate of the now-defunct Montreal School of Fine Arts, Leduc befriended Borduas and Riopelle early in his career.

The three, along with at least a dozen other artists, became members of the Automatistes: a group of abstract artists inspired by French surrealism and the poetry of André Breton.

Leduc left Montreal for Paris for several years. There, he met Jean Bazaine — an artist whom Leduc later said had a major influence on his own work.

The Quebec painter returned home in 1956 and took over as president of the Non-Figurative Artists' Association of Montreal. He later taught at Laval University in Quebec City and University of Quebec in Montreal (UQAM).

Leduc received the Governor General's award for visual arts and media arts in 2007.

An exhibition dedicated to work by Quebec painters Jean Paul Lemieux, Alfred Pellan, Fernand Leduc and Jean-Paul Riopelle opens on Feb. 20 at the Musée national des beaux-arts du Québec.


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Randy Bachman inducted into Musicians Hall of Fame

The U.S. Musicians Hall of Fame inducted 12 new members across the genres, including bluesman Buddy Guy, British rock guitarist Peter Frampton, The Guess Who and Bachman Turner Overdrive's Randy Bachman and pedal steel player and country singer Barbara Mandrell.

Also inducted during Tuesday's ceremony in Nashville country musician Jimmy Capps, bass guitarist Will Lee, rhythm guitarist Corki Casey O'Dell and country guitarist Velma Smith. Posthumous inductions went to Stevie Ray Vaughan, along with his band Double Trouble, and pedal steel guitarist Ben Keith.

The Musicians Hall of Fame also gave their first Iconic Riff Award posthumously to Roy Orbison for his guitar work on Pretty Woman, and their first Industry Icon Award to Mike Curb, the founder of Curb Records.

Performers for the awards show included Neil Young, Duane Eddy, Brenda Lee, The Oak Ridge Boys and Chris Isaak.

This was the first induction since the Musicians Hall of Fame moved to its new permanent museum location inside Nashville's Municipal Auditorium.

'I am a guitar player, a songwriter who got lucky because I stayed at it and didn't give up'- Randy Bachman

"I don't like the word 'rock star' or 'super star,'" Canadian rocker Bachman said after the induction ceremony.

"I am a guitar player, a songwriter who got lucky because I stayed at it and didn't give up, long enough that people noticed me."

"A lot of the people like myself and other fellow inductees are in here, without a name on the marquee, that actually made the sounds that you hear when you hear some of your favourite things that you find yourself humming from day to day," said Lee, who is best known for performing in the CBS Orchestra on the Late Show With David Letterman.

Barbara Mandrell, who was the first artist to win the CMA Entertainer Of The Year for two consecutive years, said learning how to play the steel guitar and the saxophone helped to launch her career while still a teenager.

"It opened the doors for me, 'cause there weren't a lot of little girls playing steel guitar," Mandrell said.


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Justin Bieber charged with assault in Toronto

Canadian pop star Justin Bieber has been charged with assault in connection with an incident involving a Toronto limousine driver in late December.

As CBC News first reported, Bieber agreed to turn himself in to Toronto police on Wednesday evening.

Police said the charges stem from an altercation between a limo driver and a passenger in the early morning hours of Monday, Dec. 30, after a group of six people was picked up outside a nightclub in the area of Peter Street and Adelaide Street West.

Police said one of the passengers hit the limo driver in the head several times during the altercation. The driver stopped and called police, but the passenger left the scene before police arrived.

PEOPLE-JUSTINBIEBER/

Justin Bieber confronts a photographer outside his hotel in central London on March 8, 2013. (Reuters)

Emerging from a black SUV wearing a winter coat and a backward ball cap, Bieber was led through a throng of reporters and screaming fans. The pop star was escorted by several police officers — who linked arms to guide him through the mob — and a bodyguard.

Police said Bieber left the building through a back door about two hours after entering.

He is scheduled to appear in court at Old City Hall on March 10.

'Hope for the best in people'

Bieber's manager, Scooter Braun, tweeted a request Wednesday night for the public to "be kind and hope for the best in people" and "not assume the worst."

Bieber's Canadian lawyer, Brian Greenspan, said he expects the singer's case to be treated as a low-level offence.

"Our position is that Mr. Bieber is innocent," he said in a written statement. "As the matter is now before the courts, it would be inappropriate to address the specifics of either the allegation or the defence at this time."

The attorney said he expects the case to be treated as a summary offence, which is the equivalent of a misdemeanour in the United States.

Miami arrest

The charge is the latest legal scrape for the heartthrob who was born in London, Ont., and raised in nearby Stratford.

Last week Bieber was arrested in Miami Beach and charged with driving under the influence, resisting arrest without violence and driving with an expired licence after police said he had been stopped while drag racing down a street before dawn.

Bieber was accused of racing a rented, yellow Lamborghini alongside a red Ferrari driven by a friend identified as rhythm and blues singer Khalil.

Police said Bieber admitted to smoking marijuana, drinking and taking a prescription medication.

He was released on $2,500 bail.

Bieber's blood-alcohol level in the Miami incident wasn't released. Under Florida law, people under the age of 21 are considered driving under the influence if they have a blood-alcohol content of 0.02 or more — a level the 5-foot-9, 140-pound star could reach with one drink.

Court records show Bieber's attorney filed a written not guilty plea on Wednesday. Bieber already has an arraignment set for Feb. 14, but Florida law doesn't require the pop star to be present.

Earlier this month detectives searched Bieber's California home looking for surveillance footage that might serve as evidence that the singer was involved in an egg-tossing vandalism case that caused thousands of dollars in damage to a neighbour's home.

Last year represented a litany of lows for the singer, from clashing with a paparazzo to fainting at a show to being photographed smoking marijuana.

Some of his troubles have reached the bizarre: German authorities charged him thousands of dollars after he abandoned a pet monkey that they seized from him for failing to have proper vaccination papers; the singer had to apologize to Bill Clinton after cursing the former president and spraying his photo with cleaning fluid in a New York City restaurant kitchen.


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Stradivarius violin stolen from Milwaukee concertmaster

Written By Unknown on Rabu, 29 Januari 2014 | 22.19

A 300-year-old "priceless" Stradivarius violin was stolen from the Milwaukee Symphony Orchestra's concertmaster during an armed robbery after a performance at a local Lutheran college, police said Tuesday.

Stradivarius violin

A Stradivarius (not pictured) crafted in 1715 and likely worth millions was stolen in Milwaukee on Monday night. (Russell Boyce/Reuters)

The rare violin was on loan to concertmaster Frank Almond. The robber used a stun gun on Almond and took the instrument from him shortly before 10:30 p.m. local time Monday in a parking lot in the rear of Wisconsin Lutheran College, where Almond had just performed, Milwaukee Police Chief Edward Flynn said.

Flynn said the violin was valued in the "high seven figures," the Milwaukee Journal Sentinel reported. Investigators believe the instrument, known in musical circles as the "Lipinski" Stradivarius, was the primary target, the chief said.

"The artistic heritage of Milwaukee was assaulted and robbed last night," Flynn told reporters.

As Almond lay on the pavement, the robber fled to a nearby vehicle, described as a maroon or burgundy minivan driven by an accomplice, which then left the scene, Flynn said.

In a 2008 Journal Sentinel story, Chicago violin dealer Stefan Hersh said the violin's value could be comparable to another Stradivarius that sold for more than $3.5 million US in 2006.

The instrument, crafted in 1715, was on indefinite loan to Almond from its anonymous owners. Almond has characterized the owners as people with "strong ties to Milwaukee."

The violin's previous owners include virtuoso Giuseppe Tartini, who was known for his "Devil's Trill" Sonata, and Polish violinist Karol Lipinski.

In a 2013 interview, Almond explained that the Lipinski is "finicky" about temperature and humidity, responding differently some days than others.

Almond conducted an online campaign to fund A Violin's Life, a recording that memorialized the history of the violin.


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American troubadour Pete Seeger dies at 94

Pete Seeger, the banjo-picking troubadour who sang for migrant workers, college students and star-struck presidents in a career that introduced generations of Americans to their folk music heritage, died Monday at the age of 94.

Seeger's grandson, Kitama Cahill-Jackson​ said his grandfather died at New York Presbyterian Hospital, where he'd been for six days. "He was chopping wood 10 days ago," he said.

Seeger — with his a lanky frame, banjo and full white beard — was an iconic figure in folk music. He performed with the great minstrel Woody Guthrie in his younger days and marched with Occupy Wall Street protesters in his 90s, leaning on two canes. He wrote or co-wrote If I Had a Hammer, Turn, Turn, TurnWhere Have All the Flowers Gone and Kisses Sweeter Than Wine. He lent his voice against Hitler and nuclear power. A cheerful warrior, he typically delivered his broadsides with an affable air and his banjo strapped on.

"Be wary of great leaders," he told The Associated Press two days after a 2011 Manhattan Occupy march. "Hope that there are many, many small leaders."

Helped revive folk music

With the Weavers, a quartet organized in 1948, Seeger helped set the stage for a national folk revival. The group — Seeger, Lee Hays, Ronnie Gilbert and Fred Hellerman — churned out hit recordings of Goodnight IreneTzena, Tzena and On Top of Old Smokey.

Seeger also was credited with popularizing We Shall Overcome, which he printed in his publication People's Song, in 1948. He later said his only contribution to the anthem of the civil rights movement was changing the second word from "will" to "shall," which he said "opens up the mouth better."

SEEGER

Legendary American folk musician Pete Seeger sings the popular Cuban song La Guantanamera, with verses dedicated to Cuban hero Jose Mati in 1999. (Reuters)

"Every kid who ever sat around a campfire singing an old song is indebted in some way to Pete Seeger," Arlo Guthrie once said.

His musical career was always braided tightly with his political activism, in which he advocated for causes ranging from civil rights to the cleanup of his beloved Hudson River. Seeger said he left the Communist Party around 1950 and later renounced it. But the association dogged him for years.

He was kept off commercial television for more than a decade after tangling with the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1955. Repeatedly pressed by the committee to reveal whether he had sung for Communists, Seeger responded sharply: "I love my country very dearly, and I greatly resent this implication that some of the places that I have sung and some of the people that I have known, and some of my opinions, whether they are religious or philosophical, or I might be a vegetarian, make me any less of an American."

He was charged with contempt of Congress, but the sentence was overturned on appeal.

5 famous Pete Seeger songs

A pioneer of the modern folk music movement and an international inspiration of music as a peaceful yet effective means of protest, Pete Seeger wrote, co-wrote or popularized many songs now considered American classics. His best-known songs include:

  • If I Had a Hammer - An activist tune co-written with the Weavers colleague Lee Hays, it is one of Seeger's most-covered songs.
  • We Shall Overcome - Adapted from earlier gospel songs and a hymn, the tune became a key song of the Civil Rights movement.
  • Turn, Turn, Turn - Made famous by The Byrds, the song was adapted from an excerpt from the Bible's book of Ecclesiastes.
  • Where Have All the Flowers Gone? - Inspired by a passage from the epic Russian novel And Quiet Flows the Don, the song was officially inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame under the folk category.
  • Kisses Sweeter Than Wine - Working again with the Weavers bandmate Lee Hays, Seeger transformed a Lead Belly tune into this love song that also became a widely covered track.

Seeger called the 1950s, years when he was denied broadcast exposure, the high point of his career. He was on the road touring college campuses, spreading the music he, Guthrie, Huddie "Leadbelly" Ledbetter and others had created or preserved.

"The most important job I did was go from college to college to college to college, one after the other, usually small ones," he told The Associated Press in 2006. "And I showed the kids there's a lot of great music in this country they never played on the radio."

His scheduled return to commercial network television on the highly rated Smothers Brothers variety show in 1967 was hailed as a nail in the coffin of the blacklist. But CBS cut out his Vietnam protest song, Waist Deep in the Big Muddy, and Seeger accused the network of censorship.

He finally got to sing it five months later in a stirring return appearance, although one station, in Detroit, cut the song's last stanza: "Now every time I read the papers/That old feelin' comes on/We're waist deep in the Big Muddy/And the big fool says to push on."

Inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Seeger's output included dozens of albums and single records for adults and children.

He also was the author or co-author of American Favourite BalladsThe Bells of RhymneyHow to Play the Five-String BanjoHenscratches and FlyspecksThe Incompleat FolksingerThe Foolish Frog and AbiyoyoCarry It On, Everybody Says Freedom and Where Have All the Flowers Gone.

He appeared in the movies To Hear My Banjo Play in 1946 and Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon in 1970. A reunion concert of the original Weavers in 1980 was filmed as a documentary titled Wasn't That a Time.

People Seeger

Pete Seeger received a Distinguished Service award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters at the age of 92. (Joe Giblin/File/The Associated Press)

By the 1990s, no longer a party member but still styling himself a communist with a small C, Seeger was heaped with national honours.

Official Washington sang along — the audience must sing, was the rule at a Seeger concert — when it lionized him at the Kennedy Centre in 1994. Then president Bill Clinton hailed him as "an inconvenient artist who dared to sing things as he saw them."

Seeger was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996 as an early influence. Ten years later, Bruce Springsteen honoured him with We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions, a rollicking reinterpretation of songs sung by Seeger. While pleased with the album, Seeger said he wished it was "more serious." A 2009 concert at Madison Square Garden to mark Seeger's 90th birthday featured Springsteen, Dave Matthews, Eddie Vedder and Emmylou Harris among the performers.

Seeger was a 2014 Grammy Awards nominee in the Best Spoken Word category, which was won by Stephen Colbert.

Seeger's sometimes ambivalent relationship with rock was most famously on display when Dylan "went electric" at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.

Witnesses say Seeger became furious backstage as the amped-up band played, though just how furious is debated. Seeger dismissed the legendary tale that he looked for an axe to cut Dylan's sound cable, and said his objection was not to the type of music but only that the guitar mix was so loud you couldn't hear Dylan's words.

Seeger maintained his reedy 6-foot-2 frame into old age, though he wore a hearing aid and conceded that his voice was pretty much shot. He relied on his audiences to make up for his diminished voice, feeding his listeners the lines and letting them sing out.

"I can't sing much," he said. "I used to sing high and low. Now I have a growl somewhere in between."

Nonetheless, in 1997 he won a Grammy for best traditional folk album, Pete.

A Harvard dropout

Seeger was born in New York City on May 3, 1919, into an artistic family whose roots traced to religious dissenters of colonial America. His mother, Constance, played violin and taught; his father, Charles, a musicologist, was a consultant to the Resettlement Administration, which gave artists work during the Depression. His uncle Alan Seeger, the poet, wrote I Have a Rendezvous With Death.

Pete Seeger said he fell in love with folk music when he was 16, at a music festival in North Carolina in 1935. His half brother, Mike Seeger, and half sister, Peggy Seeger, also became noted performers.

He learned the five-string banjo, an instrument he rescued from obscurity and played the rest of his life in a long-necked version of his own design. On the skin of Seeger's banjo was the phrase, "This machine surrounds hate and forces it to surrender" — a nod to his old pal Guthrie, who emblazoned his guitar with "This machine kills fascists."

Dropping out of Harvard in 1938 after two years as a disillusioned sociology major, he hit the road, picking up folk tunes as he hitchhiked or hopped freights.

"The sociology professor said, 'Don't think that you can change the world. The only thing you can do is study it,"' Seeger said in October 2011.

Served in the army

In 1940, with Guthrie and others, he was part of the Almanac Singers and performed benefits for disaster relief and other causes.

'The idea of using music to try to get the world together is now all over the place.'- Pete Seeger, folk singer and activist

He and Guthrie also toured migrant camps and union halls. He sang on overseas radio broadcasts for the Office of War Information early in World War II. In the Army, he spent 3½ years in Special Services, entertaining soldiers in the South Pacific, and made corporal.

Pete and Toshi Seeger were married July 20, 1943. The couple built their cabin in Beacon after World War II and stayed on the high spot of land by the Hudson River for the rest of their lives together. The couple raised three children. Toshi Seeger died in July at age 91.

The Hudson River was a particular concern of Seeger. He took the sloop Clearwater, built by volunteers in 1969, up and down the Hudson, singing to raise money to clean the water and fight polluters.

He also offered his voice in opposition to racism and the death penalty. He got himself jailed for five days for blocking traffic in Albany in 1988 in support of Tawana Brawley, a black teenager whose claim of having been raped by white men was later discredited. He continued to take part in peace protests during the war in Iraq, and he continued to lend his name to causes.

"Can't prove a damn thing, but I look upon myself as old grandpa," Seeger told the AP in 2008 when asked to reflect on his legacy. "There's not dozens of people now doing what I try to do, not hundreds, but literally thousands ... The idea of using music to try to get the world together is now all over the place."


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Berlin film fest taps George Clooney, Wes Anderson movies

This year's Berlin International Film Festival brings together new movies from Wes Anderson and George Clooney with a long-in-the-making production from U.S. director Richard Linklater and a strong contingent of films from China.

2014 Berlin International Film Festival lineup

In competition:

  • '71, director Yann Demange.
  • Aimer, boire et chanter (Life of Riley), Alain Resnais.
  • Aloft, Claudia Llosa.
  • Bai Ri Yan Huo (Black Coal, Thin Ice), Yinan Diao.
  • Boyhood, Richard Linklater.
  • Chiisai Ouchi (The Little House), Yoji Yamada.
  • Die geliebten Schwestern (Beloved Sisters), Dominik Graf.
  • The Grand Budapest Hotel, Wes Anderson.
  • Historia del miedo (History of Fear), Benjamin Naishtat.
  • Jack, Edward Berger.
  • Kraftidioten (In Order of Disappearance), Hans Petter Moland.
  • Kreuzweg (Stations of the Cross), Dietrich Brueggemann.
  • Macondo, Sudabeh Mortezai.
  • Praia do Futuro (Beach of the Future), Karim Ainouz.
  • Stratos, Yannis Economides.
  • La tercera orilla (The Third Side of the River), Celina Murga.
  • Tui Na (Blind Massage), Ye Lou.
  • La voie de l'ennemi (Two Men in Town), Rachid Bouchareb.
  • Wu Ren Qu (No Man's Land), Hao Ning.
  • Zwischen Welten (Inbetween Worlds), Feo Aladag.

Out of competition:

  • La belle et la bête (Beauty and the Beast), Christophe Gans.

  • The Monuments Men, George Clooney.

  • Nymphomaniac Volume 1 (long version), Lars von Trier.

Organizers of the Berlinale, the first of the year's major European film festivals, on Tuesday presented the lineup for the Feb. 6-16 event — its 64th edition. It centres on a main program of 23 movies, 20 of them running for the top Golden Bear award.

Festival director Dieter Kosslick said the event has a program that "looks backward in various ways." The event opens with director Anderson's new movie, The Grand Budapest Hotel, set at a European hotel in the 1920s and starring Ralph Fiennes, Jude Law and Edward Norton.

It also features Clooney's The Monuments Men, a drama starring Clooney, Matt Damon and Bill Murray about a Second World War platoon tasked with rescuing artworks from the Nazis, which is screening out of competition.

Director-writer Linklater presents Boyhood, made over more than a decade and following a boy, played by Ellar Coltrane, to adulthood. It also stars Ethan Hawke and Patricia Arquette.

The midwinter Berlinale struggles to compete for glamour with France's spring Cannes film festival and Italy's summer film gathering at Venice, but it offers a wide global reach and often rewards relatively unheralded movies.

Last year's Golden Bear went to Child's Pose from Romanian director Calin Peter Netzer.

This year's competition boasts three Chinese films set "outside the glamorous cities" and reflecting a wide variety of genres, Kosslick said. They are Diao Yinan's Black Coal, Thin Ice, Lou Ye's Blind Massage and No Man's Land from director Ning Hao.

Latin American competitors include Praia do Futuro, a gay love story set in Brazil and Germany. Peruvian-born director Claudia Llosa — whose The Milk of Sorrow won the Golden Bear in 2009 — returns with the drama Aloft.

German offerings include Stations of the Cross by Dietrich Brueggemann, which tells the story of a girl living in an ultraconservative Catholic community.

An eight-member jury led by Brokeback Mountain producer James Schamus will announce the winner of the Golden Bear and other awards on Feb. 15. The festival is also giving an honorary Golden Bear to British filmmaker Ken Loach.

Germany Berlinale Film Festival

Festival director Dieter Kosslick poses with a Berlinale bear in Berlin on Tuesday. (Markus Schreiber/Associated Press)


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Johnny Depp honoured for hair, makeup artistry on film

Actor Johnny Depp is a familiar face at awards shows, but the American film star is poised to receive a distinctive new honour: the Distinguished Artisan Award from the union representing Hollywood's makeup artists and hairstylists.

The Make-Up Artists and Hair Stylists Guild, Local 706, announced Depp as the inaugural recipient of the prize on Monday in Los Angeles.

Depp, "probably more than any other actor working today, uses the skills of our members to delineate his characters. Depp has constantly been an outstanding supporter of our crafts, ultimately respectful and appreciative of our members' abilities and generous with his creative collaboration. A great artist himself, he allows others to shine," guild president Susan Cabral-Ebert said in a statement.

Depp will the receive the prize from his Oscar-winning makeup artist, Joel Harlow, at the group's awards ceremony on Feb. 15

From the ghoulish-looking but soft-hearted Edward Scissorhands, to the brilliantly kooky Willy Wonka and The Mad Hatter, to the indelible Captain Jack Sparrow in The Pirates of the Caribbean movies, many of Depp's unforgettable cinematic roles have relied on striking visual transformations.

Check out some of his memorable looks in the attached gallery.


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Montrealer Jennifer Gasoi calls her first Grammy win 'wild'

Written By Unknown on Selasa, 28 Januari 2014 | 22.20

Jennifer Gasoi will be back home in Montreal Tuesday afternoon as Canada's first Grammy Award winner for best children's album.

'It felt divine. I just glided down the red carpet — I don't even remember walking,'- Jennifer Gasoi

The Montreal-based, Vancouver-born, musician says winning a Grammy for her album Throw a Penny in the Wishing Well was 'divine'.

"It was almost like I was on automatic pilot...I just got up. It was wild," Gasoi said, who crafts jazz-based tunes meant to appeal to both tots and their parents.

"I got up on stage and I thought: I hope she said my name — what if I made a mistake? But it was me...It felt divine. I just glided down the red carpet — I don't even remember walking."

Once she accepted her award, Gasoi soaked up every minute backstage speaking with reporters and posing for photographs.

The 56th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Show

Jennifer Gasoi accepts the best children's album award for Throw A Penny In The Wishing Well at the pre-telecast of the 56th annual GRAMMY Awards on Sunday, Jan. 26, 2014, in Los Angeles. (Matt Sayles/Invision/Associated Press)

"I did a whole photo shoot for People magazine. It was wild."

Gasoi says since her Grammy win this weekend, her email and social media pages have been overflowing with congratulatory messages  and she will take the time to sift through all of them.

Gasoi returns to Montreal Tuesday, but she won't have her Grammy in hand.

After the winner's acceptance speech on stage, the Grammy stays in Los Angeles.

"They actually engrave them with your name and album title," Gasoi explained, adding that she met one of the people who handcrafts the gold trophy when she attended at a nominees' party held on the eve of the awards' ceremony.

"I met one of the four people who crafts the Grammys. Each one takes 15 hours to handcraft, so it just makes it even more special. I'm going to be receiving it in the mail in the next 4 weeks."


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Quentin Tarantino sues Gawker over Hateful Eight script leak

Filmmaker Quentin Tarantino is on the offensive again, this time filing a copyright lawsuit against Gawker Media for sharing the leaked script of his recent film project The Hateful Eight.

Last week, the Pulp Fiction and Django Unchained writer-director revealed he was shelving his upcoming ensemble western movie project after learning one of six people with whom he had shared an early draft of the script leaked the work in progress to a wider group within the movie industry.

On Monday, Tarantino filed a lawsuit against Gawker Media for copyright infringement after one of its sub-sites, Defamer, posted multiple links for downloading the leaked script in a blog entry titled "Here is the Leaked Quentin Tarantino Hateful Eight Script."

The director filed a copyright infringement claim in U.S. District Court in Los Angeles against the anonymous users of the website anonfiles.com, which is hosting the leaked screenplay, and against Gawker Media.

"Gawker Media has made a business of predatory journalism, violating people's rights to make a buck. This time they went too far," the lawsuit states.

"Rather than merely publishing a news story reporting that Plaintiff's screenplay may have been circulating in Hollywood without his permission, Gawker Media crossed the journalistic line by promoting itself to the public as the first source to read the entire screenplay illegally.

"Gawker Media knowingly and actively acted as a promoter of copyright pirates, and, itself, did directly cause, contribute to, enable and facilitate copyright infringement," the suit states.

Tarantino is seeking unspecified damages of more than $1 million US and an injunction to stop Gawker from continuing to link to the script.

As of Monday afternoon, the post is still available on the Defamer site.


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Canadian Olympics songs mix music with a message

As we inch closer to the 2014 Winter Olympic Games, two new and starkly different songs by Canadian artists are turning a musical spotlight on Sochi.

New Brunswick singer-songwriter Roch Voisine is unveiling Living Out My Dreams, an anthem dedicated to Canada's Olympians competing in the Sochi 2014 Games.

Featuring conductor Kent Nagano and the musicians of the Montreal Symphony Orchestra as collaborators, Voisine's tune debuts on iTunes on Tuesday, with profits from its sale earmarked for the Canadian Olympic Foundation in support of emerging athletes.

"When I first got a hold of the song, there was something there. I think the song was perfect for big events," he told CBC News.

On the flip side, however, it was the international furor surrounding Russia's anti-gay laws that inspired Los Angeles-based Canadian comedian Kevin Yee to create an unofficial Olympics theme song, complete with satirical online video.

The goal was to send the organizers a message about "allowing the Olympics to happen in Russia, a country that promotes hate towards the LGBT community," he said.

In the attached video, CBC's Eli Glasner explores these two songs that hope to send very different messages about the upcoming Olympics.


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American troubadour Pete Seeger dies at 94

Pete Seeger, the banjo-picking troubadour who sang for migrant workers, college students and star-struck presidents in a career that introduced generations of Americans to their folk music heritage, died Monday at the age of 94.

Seeger's grandson, Kitama Cahill-Jackson​ said his grandfather died at New York Presbyterian Hospital, where he'd been for six days. "He was chopping wood 10 days ago," he said.

Seeger — with his a lanky frame, banjo and full white beard — was an iconic figure in folk music. He performed with the great minstrel Woody Guthrie in his younger days and marched with Occupy Wall Street protesters in his 90s, leaning on two canes. He wrote or co-wrote If I Had a Hammer, Turn, Turn, TurnWhere Have All the Flowers Gone and Kisses Sweeter Than Wine. He lent his voice against Hitler and nuclear power. A cheerful warrior, he typically delivered his broadsides with an affable air and his banjo strapped on.

"Be wary of great leaders," he told The Associated Press two days after a 2011 Manhattan Occupy march. "Hope that there are many, many small leaders."

Helped revive folk music

With The Weavers, a quartet organized in 1948, Seeger helped set the stage for a national folk revival. The group — Seeger, Lee Hays, Ronnie Gilbert and Fred Hellerman — churned out hit recordings of Goodnight IreneTzena, Tzena and On Top of Old Smokey.

Seeger also was credited with popularizing We Shall Overcome, which he printed in his publication People's Song, in 1948. He later said his only contribution to the anthem of the civil rights movement was changing the second word from "will" to "shall," which he said "opens up the mouth better."

SEEGER

Legendary American folk musician Pete Seeger sings the popular Cuban song La Guantanamera, with verses dedicated to Cuban hero Jose Mati in 1999. (Reuters)

"Every kid who ever sat around a campfire singing an old song is indebted in some way to Pete Seeger," Arlo Guthrie once said.

His musical career was always braided tightly with his political activism, in which he advocated for causes ranging from civil rights to the cleanup of his beloved Hudson River. Seeger said he left the Communist Party around 1950 and later renounced it. But the association dogged him for years.

He was kept off commercial television for more than a decade after tangling with the House Un-American Activities Committee in 1955. Repeatedly pressed by the committee to reveal whether he had sung for Communists, Seeger responded sharply: "I love my country very dearly, and I greatly resent this implication that some of the places that I have sung and some of the people that I have known, and some of my opinions, whether they are religious or philosophical, or I might be a vegetarian, make me any less of an American."

He was charged with contempt of Congress, but the sentence was overturned on appeal.

Seeger called the 1950s, years when he was denied broadcast exposure, the high point of his career. He was on the road touring college campuses, spreading the music he, Guthrie, Huddie "Leadbelly" Ledbetter and others had created or preserved.

"The most important job I did was go from college to college to college to college, one after the other, usually small ones," he told The Associated Press in 2006. "And I showed the kids there's a lot of great music in this country they never played on the radio."

His scheduled return to commercial network television on the highly rated Smothers Brothers variety show in 1967 was hailed as a nail in the coffin of the blacklist. But CBS cut out his Vietnam protest song, Waist Deep in the Big Muddy, and Seeger accused the network of censorship.

He finally got to sing it five months later in a stirring return appearance, although one station, in Detroit, cut the song's last stanza: "Now every time I read the papers/That old feelin' comes on/We're waist deep in the Big Muddy/And the big fool says to push on."

Inducted into Rock and Roll Hall of Fame

Seeger's output included dozens of albums and single records for adults and children.

He also was the author or co-author of American Favourite BalladsThe Bells of RhymneyHow to Play the Five-String BanjoHenscratches and FlyspecksThe Incompleat FolksingerThe Foolish Frog and AbiyoyoCarry It On, Everybody Says Freedom and Where Have All the Flowers Gone.

He appeared in the movies To Hear My Banjo Play in 1946 and Tell Me That You Love Me, Junie Moon in 1970. A reunion concert of the original Weavers in 1980 was filmed as a documentary titled Wasn't That a Time.

People Seeger

Pete Seeger received a Distinguished Service award from the American Academy of Arts and Letters at the age of 92. (Joe Giblin/File/The Associated Press)

By the 1990s, no longer a party member but still styling himself a communist with a small C, Seeger was heaped with national honours.

Official Washington sang along — the audience must sing, was the rule at a Seeger concert — when it lionized him at the Kennedy Centre in 1994. Then president Bill Clinton hailed him as "an inconvenient artist who dared to sing things as he saw them."

Seeger was inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1996 as an early influence. Ten years later, Bruce Springsteen honoured him with We Shall Overcome: The Seeger Sessions, a rollicking reinterpretation of songs sung by Seeger. While pleased with the album, Seeger said he wished it was "more serious." A 2009 concert at Madison Square Garden to mark Seeger's 90th birthday featured Springsteen, Dave Matthews, Eddie Vedder and Emmylou Harris among the performers.

Seeger was a 2014 Grammy Awards nominee in the Best Spoken Word category, which was won by Stephen Colbert.

Seeger's sometimes ambivalent relationship with rock was most famously on display when Dylan "went electric" at the 1965 Newport Folk Festival.

Witnesses say Seeger became furious backstage as the amped-up band played, though just how furious is debated. Seeger dismissed the legendary tale that he looked for an axe to cut Dylan's sound cable, and said his objection was not to the type of music but only that the guitar mix was so loud you couldn't hear Dylan's words.

Seeger maintained his reedy 6-foot-2 frame into old age, though he wore a hearing aid and conceded that his voice was pretty much shot. He relied on his audiences to make up for his diminished voice, feeding his listeners the lines and letting them sing out.

"I can't sing much," he said. "I used to sing high and low. Now I have a growl somewhere in between."

Nonetheless, in 1997 he won a Grammy for best traditional folk album, Pete.

A Harvard dropout

Seeger was born in New York City on May 3, 1919, into an artistic family whose roots traced to religious dissenters of colonial America. His mother, Constance, played violin and taught; his father, Charles, a musicologist, was a consultant to the Resettlement Administration, which gave artists work during the Depression. His uncle Alan Seeger, the poet, wrote I Have a Rendezvous With Death.

Pete Seeger said he fell in love with folk music when he was 16, at a music festival in North Carolina in 1935. His half brother, Mike Seeger, and half sister, Peggy Seeger, also became noted performers.

He learned the five-string banjo, an instrument he rescued from obscurity and played the rest of his life in a long-necked version of his own design. On the skin of Seeger's banjo was the phrase, "This machine surrounds hate and forces it to surrender" — a nod to his old pal Guthrie, who emblazoned his guitar with "This machine kills fascists."

Dropping out of Harvard in 1938 after two years as a disillusioned sociology major, he hit the road, picking up folk tunes as he hitchhiked or hopped freights.

"The sociology professor said, 'Don't think that you can change the world. The only thing you can do is study it,"' Seeger said in October 2011.

Served in the army

In 1940, with Guthrie and others, he was part of the Almanac Singers and performed benefits for disaster relief and other causes.

'The idea of using music to try to get the world together is now all over the place.'- Pete Seeger, folk singer and activist

He and Guthrie also toured migrant camps and union halls. He sang on overseas radio broadcasts for the Office of War Information early in World War II. In the Army, he spent 3½ years in Special Services, entertaining soldiers in the South Pacific, and made corporal.

Pete and Toshi Seeger were married July 20, 1943. The couple built their cabin in Beacon after World War II and stayed on the high spot of land by the Hudson River for the rest of their lives together. The couple raised three children. Toshi Seeger died in July at age 91.

The Hudson River was a particular concern of Seeger. He took the sloop Clearwater, built by volunteers in 1969, up and down the Hudson, singing to raise money to clean the water and fight polluters.

He also offered his voice in opposition to racism and the death penalty. He got himself jailed for five days for blocking traffic in Albany in 1988 in support of Tawana Brawley, a black teenager whose claim of having been raped by white men was later discredited. He continued to take part in peace protests during the war in Iraq, and he continued to lend his name to causes.

"Can't prove a damn thing, but I look upon myself as old grandpa," Seeger told the AP in 2008 when asked to reflect on his legacy. "There's not dozens of people now doing what I try to do, not hundreds, but literally thousands ... The idea of using music to try to get the world together is now all over the place."


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Music stars take the Grammy Awards stage

Written By Unknown on Senin, 27 Januari 2014 | 22.20

Some of the world's top singers, musicians and recording artists are celebrating the past year in popular music tonight at the 56th annual Grammy Awards.

Chart-topping nominees — including Jay Z, Justin Timberlake, Macklemore and Ryan Lewis, Lorde, Kacey Musgraves and Kendrick Lamar — are attending the performance-packed gala.

The Grammys are administered by the U.S. Recording Academy. More than 70 awards were handed out at an earlier, pre-telecast ceremony, hosted by Cyndi Lauper.

The Grammy broadcast is taking place at the Staples Center in Los Angeles, hosted by performer LL Cool J and airing on CBS and Citytv.


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Daft Punk, Get Lucky triumph at Grammys

Longtime dance-electronic duo Daft Punk earned major mainstream recognition Sunday night at the 56th annual Grammy Awards, taking five trophies including the top, coveted album and record of the year honours.

Despite their multiple wins, the critically acclaimed, helmet-clad duo — Thomas Bangalter and Guy-Manuel De Homem-Christo — maintained their tradition of not speaking in public or revealing their faces, so for most of the night, it was largely left to collaborator Pharrell Williams to accept their awards.

"Honestly, I bet France is really proud of these guys right now," Williams noted at one point, before acknowledging the work of musician, composer and producer Nile Rodgers on the ubiquitous track, as well as Daft Punk's album Random Access Memories.

"This is the most insane thing," 1970s-era singer-songwriter Paul Williams, who also participated in the album, added as the Random Access Memories collaborators gathered onstage to accept album of the year.

"Back when I was drinking and using, I used to imagine things that weren't there and it was frightening. And then I got sober and two robots called and asked me to make an album."

Along with record of the year (a performance honour), Get Lucky won best pop duo/group performance. Random Access Memories won best electronic/dance album, best engineered album and album of the year. For the final category, Cologne-based Canadian pianist and composer Chilly Gonzales was among those named in Daft Punk's lengthy list of contributors.

Breakthrough for newcomers

Two newcomers on the music scene were also crowned as key winners at the annual awards: rap newcomers Macklemore & Ryan Lewis and rising young star Lorde.

Macklemore & Ryan Lewis took four Grammys early on, including a trio of awards — best rap album for The Heist along with best rap performance and best rap song for the catchy Thrift Shop — at the pre-telecast ceremony, which was hosted by singer, songwriter and composer Cyndi Lauper. The duo then went on to win the first award of the evening's live telecast: best new artist.

"I want to thank our fans: the people who got us on this stage. Before there was any media, before there was any buzz about us, before there was a story, there were our fans, and it spread organically through them," Macklemore, whose real name is Ben Haggerty, said onstage.

"We made this album without a record label. We made it independently and we appreciate all the support."

Their dominance of the rap categories was a controversial topic of the evening across social media. Earlier in the week, a source revealed to the Associated Press that the rap committee had rejected the duo from its categories, but that the decision had been overruled by the general Grammy committee.

Near the end of the telecast, Macklemore and Lewis also turned in one of the evening's most talked-about showpieces: a mid-performance marriage celebration for 33 couples, some gay and some straight, during their tune Same Love, which was accompanied by Mary Lambert, Madonna, Trombone Shorty and Queen Latifah.

New Zealand's Lorde delivered an understated performance of her hit song Royals early on in the broadcast, a fitting precursor to the track eventually winning both best pop solo performance and song of the year (an honour she shared with co-writer Joel Little).

"This is the one thing that I did not expect the most about tonight, so thank you so much," the fresh-faced New Zealand singer, 17, said upon her first win and adding thanks to her category's fellow nominees: Justin Timberlake, Katy Perry, Sara Bareilles and Bruno Mars.

"Thank you everyone who has let this song explode, because it's been mental," she said later as she accepted song of the year alongside Little.

Multiple wins for Timberlake, McCartney

Another of this year's top nominees, Justin Timberlake, earned a host of Grammy kudos:

  • Best R&B song for Pusher Love Girl.
  • Best music video for Suit and Tie (an award that goes to director David Fincher).
  • As the featured artist on rap veteran Jay Z's hit track Holy Grail, which earned the Grammy for best rap/sung collaboration.

Jay Z had started the day as this year's most-nominated artist, earning nods in nine categories.

The evening also saw Paul McCartney honoured several times. During the web-streamed pre-telecast, Live Kisses, the concert film shot during a recent New York performance, won best music film. During the main broadcast, the former Beatle was among the co-winners of the best rock song category for Cut Me Some Slack, a tune from the soundtrack of Dave Grohl's Sound City music documentary. McCartney shares the latter trophy with Grohl, Krist Novoselic and Pat Smear.

"[Grohl] said to me, 'We'll do a jam on Long Tall Sally.' I said, 'No, we've been there. We have done that. We should just make something up,' and we did it," McCartney recounted.

The evening also had a bit of a throwback feel in some of the rock categories, which included a best rock album win for Celebration Day by Led Zeppelin. The album was part of the 2007 reunion concert and film in which the surviving band members Robert Plant, Jimmy Page and John Paul Jones joined with Jason Bonham (son of the late John Bonham) for a musical tribute to record exec Ahmet Ertegun. Meanwhile, rock stalwarts Black Sabbath earned the best metal performance Grammy for God is Dead?

Rising country star Kacey Musgraves was among the night's upset winners, besting more senior peers to take two significant trophies: best country album for Same Trailer, Different Park and best country song for Merry Go 'Round.

Canadian winners

A pair of Canadians were among the early evening winners: B.C. crooner Michael Bublé and Vancouver-born, Montreal-based Jennifer Gasoi.

Bublé, who was not in attendance, nabbed his fourth Grammy in the best traditional pop vocal album category for To Be Loved. Jazz artist and children's entertainer Gasoi won best children's album for Throw a Penny in the Wishing Well.

A host of Canadians left with empty hands, including rapper Drake, rocker Neil Young, composer Mychael Danna and singer-songwriter Deric Ruttan.

Memorable match-ups

Beyoncé kicked off the evening's performance-filled broadcast with a steamy rendition of her track Drunk in Love, with her rap mogul husband Jay Z joining in at the end.

Others who took the stage included Katy Perry, Pink with Nate Ruess, Hunter Hayes, Taylor Swift and surviving Beatles McCartney and Ringo Starr.

In recent years, the Grammys broadcast has become known for unconventional or unlikely musical pairings, which have the potential to become memorable match-ups (for better or worse).

In keeping with tradition, this year's tag-team performers included metal icons Metallica performing with classical pianist Lang Lang, rapper Kendrick Lamar with alt-rockers Imagine Dragons, R&B singer Robin Thicke with Chicago, Carole King with Sara Bareilles, and soul legend Stevie Wonder with Daft Punk. Nine Inch Nails, Queens of the Stone Age, Dave Grohl and Lindsey Buckingham united onstage for the grand finale.


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Grammys 2014: winners of the 56th annual music awards

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  • 22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

    5 memorable performances from the Grammys

    Whether it was over-the-top turns from current chart-toppers or one of the U.S. Recording Academy's many risk-taking match-ups, the 56th annual Grammy Awards was a performance-packed extravaganza.

    Here are five onstage performances that stood out at the Los Angeles ceremony.

    1. Strappy leotard-clad Beyoncé kicked off the show with a steamy rendition of her tune Drunk in Love, featuring enough chair-gyrating to make people wonder: Rihanna who? The undeniably sexy performance (she was eventually joined by her husband Jay Z) was perhaps a questionable choice to open the show (8 p.m. ET, still family hour!), but it definitely got juices flowing and people talking.


    2. It might have been one of the evening's head-scratchers on paper, but who would have thought that rising rap star Kendrick Lamar (unfortunately left without any Grammy hardware Sunday night) and best rock performance-winner Imagine Dragons would deliver such a blistering duet performance? The two acts melded their hits m.A.A.d. City and Radioactive in an unexpected, energetic and thoroughly enjoyable way.


    3. Let's call this two very different sides of today's pop music coin. Katy Perry offered up a dark and witchy, pyrotechnics-ladden, heavily choreographed rendition of Dark Horse that was apparently inspired by Stevie Nicks (but actually felt closer to a bizarro version of a Weird Sisters scene from Macbeth).

    Meanwhile, Lorde was sparse, haunting and effective singing an understated version of her double-Grammy winner Royals.


    4. It was a slightly awkward but ultimately well-meaning, sweet and celebratory moment as Macklemore, Ryan Lewis and Mary Lambert performed their equality-championing hit Same Love (with contributions from Madonna, Queen Latifah and Trombone Shorty) as 33 couples, some gay and some straight, marked their marriages at the Staples Center.


    5. "We're all about to get lucky," actor Neil Patrick Harris declared as he welcomed Daft Punk, Nile Rodgers, Pharrell and Stevie Wonder to the stage and indeed we did.

    It was a fantastic celebration of the year's catchiest song, the night's biggest winners and definitely the performance that won over viewers at home and online, and the star-studded crowd 100 per cent (plus, cameras had a field day filming everyone from Yoko Ono to Steven Tyler to Taylor Swift to Jay Z and Beyoncé seriously grooving to the track).


    Honorable mentions: Taylor Swift's stagey headbanging (to herself, playing piano), Pink showing the Grammy-viewing audience the high-flying aerial dance you'd see at her concerts, Metallica rocking out with Lang Lang, Pharrell Williams's Mountie-inspired hat, and both the partial Highwaymen reunion and partial Beatles reunion.


    22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Grammys ready to award year's best music

    Written By Unknown on Minggu, 26 Januari 2014 | 22.19

    The Grammy Awards, dubbed "music's biggest night" by organizers, are set for a massive celebration of the past year's best in North American music on Sunday.

    Heading into the 56th annual celebration, rap heavyweight Jay-Z leads the field of contenders with nominations in nine categories. That said, a host of relative newcomers who made a major splash last year — including American rappers Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, New Zealand teen singer Lorde, rising U.S. hip-hop star Kendrick Lamar and emerging country artist Kacey Musgraves — aren't too far behind.

    Others in the running for multiple trophies include singers Bruno Mars, Justin Timberlake, Taylor Swift and singer-producer Pharrell Williams.

    Canadians vying for Grammy glory on Sunday include Toronto rapper Drake, rocker Neil Young, crooner Michael Bublé and singer Robin Thicke (a dual citizen as son of Canadian actor Alan Thicke).

    Some Canadians to watch on Grammy weekend:

    • Toronto hip-hop artist Drake has five nominations: best rap album for Nothing Was the Same, best rap performance for Started from the Bottom and two nods for best rap song — his own Started from the Bottom and as a guest appearance on ASAP Rocky's F--kin' Problems. He's also included as a featured performer on Kendrick Lamar's album of the year nominated Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City.
    • Dual-citizen crooner Robin Thicke has three nominations: record of the year, best pop duo and group performance  as well as best pop vocal album, all for Blurred Lines.
    • Canadian rock legend Neil Young and his band Crazy Horse have one nomination: best rock album for Psychedelic Pill.
    • B.C.-bred singer Michael Bublé has one nomination: best traditional pop album for Remember You.
    • Toronto composer Mychael Danna has one nomination: best score soundtrack for visual media for Life of Pi.
    • Toronto singer The Weeknd has one nomination: best rap song collaboration as a featured artist on Wiz Khalifa's Remember You.
    • Halifax-raised songwriter and producer Henry (Cirkut) Walter has one nomination: song of the year as co-writer of Katy Perry's Roar.
    • Ontario singer-songwriter Deric Ruttan has one nomination: best country song for co-writing Blake Shelton's Mine Would Be You.
    • Vancouver-born, Montreal singer-songwriter Jennifer Gasoi has one nomination: best children's album for Throw a Penny in the Wishing Well.

    Other Canadians in the mix include:

    • Toronto's James LaBrie, frontman of best metal performance contender Dream Theater.
    • Darcy James Argue, Vancouver-born bandleader of Darcy James Argue's Secret Society, a best large jazz ensemble album nominee for Brooklyn Babylon.
    • Cologne-based Canadian performer and composer Chilly Gonzales, named on Daft Punk's album of the year nomination for Random Access Memories and also a contributor to Drake's best rap album contender Nothing Was the Same.

    Nominees in central categories include:

    • Album of the year: The Blessed Unrest, Sara Bareilles; Random Access Memories, Daft Punk; Good Kid, M.A.A.D City, Kendrick Lamar; The Heist, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis; Red, Taylor Swift.
    • Record of the year (for performance): Get Lucky, Daft Punk & Pharrell Williams; Radioactive, Imagine Dragons; Royals, Lorde; Locked Out of Heaven, Bruno Mars; Blurred Lines, Robin Thicke featuring T.I. & Pharrell Williams.
    • Song of the year (for songwriting): Just Give Me a Reason, Jeff Bhasker, Pink & Nate Ruess; Locked Out of Heaven, Philip Lawrence, Ari Levine & Bruno Mars; Roar, Lukasz Gottwald, Max Martin, Bonnie McKee, Katy Perry & Henry Walter; Royals, Joel Little & Ella Yelich O'Connor; Same Love, Ben Haggerty, Mary Lambert & Ryan Lewis.
    • Best New Artist: James Blake; Kendrick Lamar; Macklemore & Ryan Lewis; Kacey Musgraves; Ed Sheeran.

    Over the past week, the U.S. Recording Academy, which administers the Grammys, has held a series of events honouring nominees and special award winners. Celebrations included a producers and engineers ceremony saluting Canadian rocker Neil Young on Tuesday and a Friday gala celebrating the 2014 MusiCares Person of the Year: influential singer-songwriter Carole King.

    In recent years, the Grammys broadcast has become known for unconventional or unlikely musical pairings, which have the potential to become memorable match-ups (for better or worse).

    In keeping with tradition, this year's tag-team performers include metal icons Metallica performing with classical pianist Lang Lang, rapper Kendrick Lamar with alt-rockers Imagine Dragons, R&B singer Robin Thicke with power balladeers Chicago and soul legend Stevie Wonder with dance hitmakers Daft Punk.

    Jay-Z and Beyoncé, Katy Perry, Lorde, Pink and surviving Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr will also take the stage during the televised gala.

    The Grammys officially get underway Sunday at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles at 4 p.m. ET with a pre-telecast ceremony — hosted by singer-songwriter Cyndi Lauper — where awards in approximately 70 categories will be presented. This portion will be streamed live at Grammy.com/live.

    The festivities continue Sunday evening at the Staples Center in Los Angeles with the televised Grammy gala — hosted by performer LL Cool J — beginning at 8 p.m. ET. The broadcast will air on CBS and Citytv.


    22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

    FILM REVIEW: I, Frankenstein a monstrous mess of a movie

    CBC News Posted: Jan 24, 2014 5:02 PM ET Last Updated: Jan 24, 2014 5:02 PM ET

    In Mary Shelley's 1818 novel, Victor Frankenstein recoiled in horror at the creature he gave life to moments after it was complete. Many critics, including the CBC's Eli Glasner, have done the same in the wake of its latest film interpretation, I, Frankenstein.

    Based on the graphic novel by Kevin Geroux and directed by Stuart Beattie, gone is the green-skinned creature moviegoers knew as Frankenstein's monster from Boris Karloff's 1931 version. Instead we have a well-groomed, brooding Adam Frankenstein played by Aaron Eckhart.

    Eckhart finds himself in the modern day, 200 years after his creation and caught in a war between demons and gargoyles. The demon lord Prince Naberius, played by Bill Nighy doing the best with the material he's given, wants to use the science that breathed life into Adam Frankenstein to win the war by resurrecting the dead into an unstoppable army.

    Watch the video above as Eli Glasner takes apart the monster of a movie, piece by piece.

    Comments on this story are moderated according to our Submission Guidelines. Comments are welcome while open. We reserve the right to close comments at any time.

    Submission Policy

    Note: The CBC does not necessarily endorse any of the views posted. By submitting your comments, you acknowledge that CBC has the right to reproduce, broadcast and publicize those comments or any part thereof in any manner whatsoever. Please note that comments are moderated and published according to our submission guidelines.


    22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Courtney Love wins Twitter libel trial

    A Twitter posting by Courtney Love suggesting that one of her attorneys had been "bought off" wasn't defamatory, a jury decided Friday.

    The verdict came after roughly three hours of deliberation in a case that spanned eight days and focused on the Hole frontwoman's postings on the social networking site. The case centered on one 2010 post that suggested that San Diego attorney Rhonda Holmes had been "bought off" and that was why she wasn't representing the singer anymore.

    Fired by Love

    Love had hired Holmes to file a fraud case against the estate of her late husband, Kurt Cobain. The lawyer contended during the trial that she was fired by Love and that the tweet and other statements the singer made against her have caused her substantial damages.

    'I was (expletive) devastated when Rhonda J Holmes Esq of san diego was bought off'- Courtney Love's alleged tweet

    Love's tweet stated, "I was (expletive) devastated when Rhonda J Holmes Esq of san diego was bought off" in response to a question from a user of the popular social media site.

    The message was never meant to be public, Love told jurors. She said she meant for it to be sent as a direct message, which only the recipient would see, but it instead went public and was quickly deleted.

    Swift verdict

    The swift verdict wasn't witnessed by Love, who had left court after closing arguments ended Friday morning. She arrived just as the courthouse was closing down and met her attorneys, John Lawrence and Matthew Bures, in the hallway where she hugged them both.

    Love praised her attorneys and the jury after the verdict. Asked about her social media presence, Love said she refrained from posting on Twitter during the trial. "I didn't tweet out of respect for the case," she said.

    First 'Twibel' trial

    While the case was billed as the first "Twibel" trial in which Twitter and libel law intersected, Lawrence said it was tried by the same rules as traditional defamation cases.

    Jurors determined that Love's tweet included false information, but the musician didn't know it wasn't true.

    Holmes' attorneys urged jurors in closing arguments to award the attorney $8 million and send a message that false statements online had consequences.

    Holmes' lawyer Mitchell Langberg said that while his client was disappointed with the verdict, her reputation was upheld and the world now knows that Love's statements were false.

    "At the end of the day, her biggest asset in life is her reputation," Langberg said. "That she got back today."


    22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Patrick Dempsey confirms extension with 'Grey's Anatomy'

    Dempsey also plans to run a full season in the United SportsCar Championship.

    The Associated Press Posted: Jan 25, 2014 11:57 PM ET Last Updated: Jan 25, 2014 11:57 PM ET

    Patrick Dempsey's acting and racing careers will be intermingled for the foreseeable future.

    Dempsey, a driver/owner racing in the Rolex 24 at Daytona endurance event this weekend, confirmed Saturday night that he has signed a two-year contract extension to continue with the popular television series Grey's Anatomy. The show has not officially been picked up beyond its 10th season, but Dempsey's deal provides a strong indication that it will be back.

    Double life

    Dempsey also plans to run a full season in the United SportsCar Championship.

    Dempsey said the acting gig has been a huge help to his other full-time job. Dempsey and co-driver Andrew Davis are racing 13 events — which would be the actor's first full season.

    Scheduling around races

    He said his TV bosses do "a remarkable job scheduling around these races now, and I wouldn't be able to do it without them. The fact that they continue to let me race is remarkable in itself, so I am grateful for that and grateful to have employment that is known around the world. It gives me a platform to come and do this type of thing, and it helps the sponsors. I'm lucky to have the gig."

    When the 48-year-old Dempsey was asked whether he's had any thoughts about giving up acting for racing, he said, "When I grow up, I want to race full time."


    22.19 | 0 komentar | Read More

    Grammys ready to award year's best music

    Written By Unknown on Sabtu, 25 Januari 2014 | 22.20

    The Grammy Awards, dubbed "music's biggest night" by organizers, are set for a massive celebration of the past year's best in North American music on Sunday.

    Heading into the 56th annual celebration, rap heavyweight Jay-Z leads the field of contenders with nominations in nine categories. That said, a host of relative newcomers who made a major splash last year — including American rappers Macklemore & Ryan Lewis, New Zealand teen singer Lorde, rising U.S. hip-hop star Kendrick Lamar and emerging country artist Kacey Musgraves — aren't too far behind.

    Others in the running for multiple trophies include singers Bruno Mars, Justin Timberlake, Taylor Swift and singer-producer Pharrell Williams.

    Canadians vying for Grammy glory on Sunday include Toronto rapper Drake, rocker Neil Young, crooner Michael Bublé and singer Robin Thicke (a dual citizen as son of Canadian actor Alan Thicke).

    Some Canadians to watch on Grammy weekend:

    • Toronto hip-hop artist Drake has five nominations: best rap album for Nothing Was the Same, best rap performance for Started from the Bottom and two nods for best rap song — his own Started from the Bottom and as a guest appearance on ASAP Rocky's F--kin' Problems. He's also included as a featured performer on Kendrick Lamar's album of the year nominated Good Kid, M.A.A.D. City.
    • Dual-citizen crooner Robin Thicke has three nominations: record of the year, best pop duo and group performance  as well as best pop vocal album, all for Blurred Lines.
    • Canadian rock legend Neil Young and his band Crazy Horse have one nomination: best rock album for Psychedelic Pill.
    • B.C.-bred singer Michael Bublé has one nomination: best traditional pop album for Remember You.
    • Toronto composer Mychael Danna has one nomination: best score soundtrack for visual media for Life of Pi.
    • Toronto singer The Weeknd has one nomination: best rap song collaboration as a featured artist on Wiz Khalifa's Remember You.
    • Halifax-raised songwriter and producer Henry (Cirkut) Walter has one nomination: song of the year as co-writer of Katy Perry's Roar.
    • Ontario singer-songwriter Deric Ruttan has one nomination: best country song for co-writing Blake Shelton's Mine Would Be You.
    • Vancouver-born, Montreal singer-songwriter Jennifer Gasoi has one nomination: best children's album for Throw a Penny in the Wishing Well.

    Other Canadians in the mix include:

    • Toronto's James LaBrie, frontman of best metal performance contender Dream Theater.
    • Darcy James Argue, Vancouver-born bandleader of Darcy James Argue's Secret Society, a best large jazz ensemble album nominee for Brooklyn Babylon.
    • Cologne-based Canadian performer and composer Chilly Gonzales, named on Daft Punk's album of the year nomination for Random Access Memories and also a contributor to Drake's best rap album contender Nothing Was the Same.

    Nominees in central categories include:

    • Album of the year: The Blessed Unrest, Sara Bareilles; Random Access Memories, Daft Punk; Good Kid, M.A.A.D City, Kendrick Lamar; The Heist, Macklemore & Ryan Lewis; Red, Taylor Swift.
    • Record of the year (for performance): Get Lucky, Daft Punk & Pharrell Williams; Radioactive, Imagine Dragons; Royals, Lorde; Locked Out of Heaven, Bruno Mars; Blurred Lines, Robin Thicke featuring T.I. & Pharrell Williams.
    • Song of the year (for songwriting): Just Give Me a Reason, Jeff Bhasker, Pink & Nate Ruess; Locked Out of Heaven, Philip Lawrence, Ari Levine & Bruno Mars; Roar, Lukasz Gottwald, Max Martin, Bonnie McKee, Katy Perry & Henry Walter; Royals, Joel Little & Ella Yelich O'Connor; Same Love, Ben Haggerty, Mary Lambert & Ryan Lewis.
    • Best New Artist: James Blake; Kendrick Lamar; Macklemore & Ryan Lewis; Kacey Musgraves; Ed Sheeran.

    Over the past week, the U.S. Recording Academy, which administers the Grammys, has held a series of events honouring nominees and special award winners. Celebrations included a producers and engineers ceremony saluting Canadian rocker Neil Young on Tuesday and a Friday gala celebrating the 2014 MusiCares Person of the Year: influential singer-songwriter Carole King.

    In recent years, the Grammys broadcast has become known for unconventional or unlikely musical pairings, which have the potential to become memorable match-ups (for better or worse).

    In keeping with tradition, this year's tag-team performers include metal icons Metallica performing with classical pianist Lang Lang, rapper Kendrick Lamar with alt-rockers Imagine Dragons, R&B singer Robin Thicke with power balladeers Chicago and soul legend Stevie Wonder with dance hitmakers Daft Punk.

    Jay-Z and Beyoncé, Katy Perry, Lorde, Pink and surviving Beatles Paul McCartney and Ringo Starr will also take the stage during the televised gala.

    The Grammys officially get underway Sunday at the Nokia Theatre in Los Angeles at 4 p.m. ET with a pre-telecast ceremony — hosted by singer-songwriter Cyndi Lauper — where awards in approximately 70 categories will be presented. This portion will be streamed live at Grammy.com/live.

    The festivities continue Sunday evening at the Staples Center in Los Angeles with the televised Grammy gala — hosted by performer LL Cool J — beginning at 8 p.m. ET. The broadcast will air on CBS and Citytv.


    22.20 | 0 komentar | Read More
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