Monday 30 June 2008

Duffy - Duffy Felt Used By Former Bands


Welsh singer DUFFY was so desperate to break in to the music business she was in five bands at the same time - and kept them all secret from each other.

The 23-year-old - real name Aimee Ann Duffy - tried to launch her career as a teenager, but always took a back seat in the groups.

And the star admits she felt ashamed of her secret and worried that the musicians were just using her for her voice.

She says, "I kept getting into all these projects. I had five bands at one time, like a promiscuous lover, never telling them about each other because I just knew eventually it would all fall apart.

"It was a nightmare for my Dad, always having these boys round, and everything was always like I was being used as a vehicle. Or my voice was the cherry on top of someone else's idea ... and I just felt really used."

But the singer, who is enjoying worldwide success with debut album Rockferry, always craved the limelight for herself.

She adds, "I got to 18 and I thought, 'You know what? The thing that gives me so much passion is also causing me so much pain.' And I thought, 'This isn't right. What am I fighting for? What do I want?' And then I realised that my vision was completely wrong. What I needed to do was just bring it back to basics and just sing."





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Wednesday 25 June 2008

Gottfried Tollmann and Ralf Hildenbeutel

Gottfried Tollmann and Ralf Hildenbeutel   
Artist: Gottfried Tollmann and Ralf Hildenbeutel

   Genre(s): 
Electronic
   



Discography:


Tollmann Hildenbeutel   
 Tollmann Hildenbeutel

   Year: 1996   
Tracks: 8




 






Monday 16 June 2008

Jacko plots Las Vegas comeback

Michael Jackson may relaunch his career as a Las Vegas act, thanks to the private equity group that recently bought the loan on his Neverland Ranch in California to help the pop star avert foreclosure.

The investment firm Colony Capital is discussing with Jackson various repayment options for the $US23 million debt, including a possible long-term engagement as the resident performer of a Vegas casino or nightclub, a source familiar with the talks said on Friday.

Colony Capital, based in Los Angeles, owns the Las Vegas Hilton and is a major shareholder in the Station Casinos chain.

The source emphasized that no deal was in place and that a gig for Jackson in Las Vegas, a city of second chances for many faded superstars, was merely one idea under consideration as Colony Capital explores loan repayment scenarios with him.

The talks with Jackson were first reported by the Wall Street Journal, which quoted Colony Capital CEO Tom Barrack as saying, "we've been having discussions with Mr Jackson about a recapitalization and refinancing of Neverland in addition to various other business opportunities and mutual interests".

A Colony Capital spokesman told Reuters the company was not commenting further on the matter. Jackson's personal spokeswoman was not immediately available for comment.

Bringing Jackson to Sin City as a performer would mark the biggest step the 49-year-old performer has taken toward a comeback since a child molestation trial left his career, his reputation and financial status in tatters three years ago.

LAST COMEBACK PANNED

Jackson became a virtual recluse after a California jury acquitted him of all charges in June 2005, moving his place of residence alternately to Ireland, Dubai and Bahrain. He reportedly is now living with his three young children in Pahrump, Nevada, about 60 miles from Las Vegas.

A fleeting "comeback" appearance at a London awards show in 2006 was roundly panned by critics, though a 25th anniversary reissue of his blockbuster Thriller album earlier this year posted strong sales.

Still, the mercurial performer known for extravagant spending has by all accounts remained mired in debt.

In a bid to stave off insolvency in 2006, Jackson reached a deal to refinance more than $US200 million in loans secured by his prized stake in the Beatles' song catalog.

Those loans held by the New York private equity firm and hedge fund Fortress Investment Group, which in May sold Jackson's note on the Neverland Ranch to Colony Capital in a deal that averted foreclosure proceedings on the property.

According to the Journal, Colony is negotiating an arrangement allowing Jackson to delay making payments for the time being in exchange for more money further down the road.

Colony also is urging the singer to sell off Neverland as quickly as possible and to emerge from seclusion in Nevada to launch a career comeback in Vegas, the Journal said.

One idea under discussion, the newspaper reported, was for Colony to install Jackson as a regular performer at one of its hotel-casinos, playing 180 nights a year.

Another would be to create a musical extravaganza in which Jackson would appear 20 or 30 times a year, possibly with his brothers.

Colony also is pressing Jackson to go on TV, perhaps on Oprah Winfrey's show, to make a public statement putting the Neverland Ranch and the controversy connected with it behind him, and to perform in a TV special proving to the world that he can still sing and dance.





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Friday 6 June 2008

Game Said He Didn't Miss 50 Cent, Dr. Dre On L.A.X.: 'I Can Do It On My Own'




While serving his prison sentence, the Game didn't want to make a mockery of people doing "real time." He just wanted to stay out of the way. But like a lot of celebs who find themselves in prison, Game was harassed and got into physical conflicts with some of the corrections officers.

"They was doing all kinds of crazy stuff," the MC said recently in New York. "They were playing G-Unit songs through the intercom while I was asleep. They was playing 'Window Shopper' just to irritate me. First couple of days, I was getting irritated and pissed off. But then it started to set in that this is a big game to them and they just kids, and they don't really understand life yet. It was funny after a while. It wasn't funny the first couple of times, though."

Game only had to serve two weeks of his 120-day sentence — for which he gives a big thanks to his lawyers — but it was a burden nonetheless. Game's first single after his release from prison in mid-March was the Cool & Dre-produced "Big Dreams."

"I was just free," he said. "I was so happy to record, even though I was in there for just two weeks. In jail, you're counting seconds: '1, 2, 3.' Nothing's happening, man. You're just standing there. No TV, no radio, you're in your cell. You gotta find time to meditate. Read a book. Work out. That's what I did. I read four or five novels in two weeks. Got my push-ups on."

In addition to "Big Dreams," the Compton MC also released "Game's Pain," an ode to hip-hop luminaries from LL Cool J to the Fresh Prince. Keyshia Cole sings on the hook.

"There was a message in The Documentary, there was a message in The Doctor's Advocate, there is no message in L.A.X.," he said of his upcoming LP. "If there is a message, that message will be that for the first time in my career, I was able to record a studio album in peace — without drama, without anything rendering me helpless, without having to fight with my label or 50. Or without worrying about if Dre would be producing on the album. I can do it on my own. I proved that with my last album."

Game described his state of mind as "free-spirited" and said his artistry is vastly improved.

"My lyrics, 10 times elevated," he said. "I've grown as an MC more than I've ever thought I could have done. I got to record with people that really wanted to do music with me."

In some cases, the artists and producers broke their necks to work with the Game. No MP3s were sent out. Everybody who contributed to the album, whether it be vocally or musically, was actually in the lab with Game during the recording sessions. Ice Cube turns up, as do Marsha Ambrosia and Busta Rhymes on a record called "Undefeated." Ne-Yo appears twice on "Thug and a Gentleman" and "Camera Phone."

"I came up with a couple of concepts," Game said. "Two times in a row, he outwrote on my hooks. They became Ne-Yo hooks. ... Ne-Yo is like my Nate Dogg right now."

L.A.X. will be released July 8.






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