Monday 30 June 2008

Billy Ray Cyrus was surprised by daughter's Vanity Fair photo








NEW YORK - Billy Ray Cyrus says he wasn't around when Annie Leibovitz photographed his 15-year-old daughter, Miley, wrapped in a sheet with her back exposed, for the June issue of Vanity Fair magazine.

"I wasn't there at the time," the 46-year-old country star said in an interview Tuesday on NBC's "Today" show.

"(Miley's) publicist was there and everyone seemed in control," he said. "I didn't know they (were) gonna strip her down and wrap her with a blanket."

"So I was surprised when I saw it, you know, but . . . stuff happens. That's life. Things happen and sometimes things get a little out of control and you just gotta deal with life," he said. "Again, it's peaks and valleys and ups and downs."

Cyrus, who co-stars with Miley in Disney Channel's "Hannah Montana," said Leibovitz was a "good person and a great photographer" but looking back, he would have stayed to chaperone the photo shoot.

Another photo in the Vanity Fair spread that caused a stir was the image of Miley in a black tank top that revealed her midriff as Cyrus held her in his arms.

When asked if that photo was a mistake, Cyrus said: "It's not a mistake to me. If it is to someone else, I'm sorry if I offended somebody, but no, that's just a daddy that loves his daughter a whole lot."

Cyrus said he and Miley "got caught up in this adventure that we've gone through with this dream, and what we do for a living. . . . We both love acting, we love making music and we love each other. I'm her dad and she's my daughter, so if a daddy hasn't hugged his daughter recently, I'd recommend he does."

-

On the Net: NBC: http://www.msnbc.msn.com/

Disney Channel: http://tv.disney.go.com/disneychannel/hannahmontana/










See Also

Divaria

Divaria   
Artist: Divaria

   Genre(s): 
New Age
   



Discography:


Daz Nuance   
 Daz Nuance

   Year: 1998   
Tracks: 13




 





Gottfried Tollmann and Ralf Hildenbeutel

Sunday 29 June 2008

Motley Crue

Motley Crue   
Artist: Motley Crue

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   Rock: Hard-Rock
   Metal: Heavy
   Metal
   



Discography:


Carnival of Sins: Live   
 Carnival of Sins: Live

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 23


Red, White and Crue (CD 2)   
 Red, White and Crue (CD 2)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 17


Red, White and Crue (CD 1)   
 Red, White and Crue (CD 1)

   Year: 2005   
Tracks: 20


Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 2 (CD 4)   
 Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 2 (CD 4)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 13


Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 2 (CD 3)   
 Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 2 (CD 3)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 13


Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 2 (CD 2)   
 Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 2 (CD 2)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 17


Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 2 (CD 1)   
 Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 2 (CD 1)

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 16


If I Die Tomorrow   
 If I Die Tomorrow

   Year: 2004   
Tracks: 2


Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 1 (CD 4)   
 Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 1 (CD 4)

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 15


Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 1 (CD 3)   
 Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 1 (CD 3)

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 16


Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 1 (CD 2)   
 Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 1 (CD 2)

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 20


Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 1 (CD 1)   
 Music To Crash Your Car To, Vol. 1 (CD 1)

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 19


New Tattoo   
 New Tattoo

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 12


Supersonic and Demonic Relics   
 Supersonic and Demonic Relics

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 15


Live: Entertainment Or Death (CD 2)   
 Live: Entertainment Or Death (CD 2)

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 10


Live: Entertainment Or Death (CD 1)   
 Live: Entertainment Or Death (CD 1)

   Year: 1999   
Tracks: 11


Generation Swine   
 Generation Swine

   Year: 1997   
Tracks: 13


Quaternary   
 Quaternary

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 5


Motley Crue   
 Motley Crue

   Year: 1994   
Tracks: 12


Decade Of Decadence '81-'91 (Japanese Version)   
 Decade Of Decadence '81-'91 (Japanese Version)

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 17


Decade of Decadence '81-'91   
 Decade of Decadence '81-'91

   Year: 1991   
Tracks: 15


Dr. Feelgood (Remastered)   
 Dr. Feelgood (Remastered)

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 15


Dr. Feelgood   
 Dr. Feelgood

   Year: 1989   
Tracks: 11


Girls, Girls, Girls   
 Girls, Girls, Girls

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 10


Girls Girls Girls (Remastered)   
 Girls Girls Girls (Remastered)

   Year: 1987   
Tracks: 14


Theatre of Pain   
 Theatre of Pain

   Year: 1985   
Tracks: 10


Shout At The Devil (Remastered)   
 Shout At The Devil (Remastered)

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 15


Shout At The Devil   
 Shout At The Devil

   Year: 1983   
Tracks: 11


Too Fast For Love (Remastered)   
 Too Fast For Love (Remastered)

   Year: 1981   
Tracks: 13


Too Fast For Love   
 Too Fast For Love

   Year: 1981   
Tracks: 9


Motley Crue (Remastered)   
 Motley Crue (Remastered)

   Year:    
Tracks: 15


Monster hits   
 Monster hits

   Year:    
Tracks: 16




With a spunky repute that was arguably equaled only if by Guns N' Roses, Mötley Crüe's notorious antics made them a force to be reckoned with in the '80s. As one of the first base and nearly influential hair alloy bands of the '80s, Mötley Crüe had a serial publication of hit albums, the biggest and nearly noteworthy organism 1989's Dr. Feelgood. The ring continued to judicature disceptation into the following ten, even when their recording vocation took a downturn through a series of well-publicized mishaps and run-ins with the law. Mötley Crüe's beginning fundament be traced back to 1981, when bassist Nikki Sixx (innate Frank Ferrana) and drummer "Tommy Lee" Bass distinct to leave the bands they were in at the time and quest for a new stick out together. Bob "Mickey Mars" Deal was leased to play guitar and "Vince Neil" Wharton was added as singer. The ring went through several diagnose changes ahead Mars presented them with Mottley Krue, recalling a time when his previous band was described as a "mixed bag looking crew." After agreeing on this bring up and neutering the spelling slightly, the newly formed group began to play at local clubs and soon became cult favorites, known for their unique stage theatrics.


The ring before long met up with Allan Coffman, world Health Organization financed their first record album, Too Fast for Love, on their possess small, independent Lethur Records judge; the record sold a surprising 20,000 copies. After sign language to Elektra Records, the band released Shout at the Devil in 1983, which featured the hit picture "Looks That Kill." The record went platinum, simply the band's success was temporarily brought to a block when Neil was involved in a lethal auto accident on August 12. Driving under the influence of alcoholic drink, Neil crashed into another elevator car, cleanup his good friend and passenger Nicholas Dingley of Hanoi Rocks; the other victims emerged with upset finger cymbals and brain wrong. Neil was ground shamed of vehicular manslaughter and driving spell intoxicated, and was incarcerated for 30 years in 1985, in addition to acting biotic community serving and paying a magnanimous hard cash settlement. By the time Neil had been sentenced, notwithstanding, the band's newest record, Theatre of Pain, had already been released and soared up the charts, making the striation stars and producing their kickoff Top 40 attain with a cover of Brownsville Station's "Smokin' in the Boys' Room."


Afterwards a short hiatus, the ring regrouped with Neil to film a music picture for "Home Sweet Home"; the get-go hit power ballad to be aired on MTV, it became their to the highest degree requested music video for four-spot months straight. A 44-minute place video cassette, Uncensored, was released in 1986, containing rare live footage and interviews; in the meantime, Lee marital actress Heather Locklear. A year later on, Mötley Crüe released their fourth record album, Girls Girls Girls. The uncensored video for the popular deed of conveyance raceway was straight off banned from television set, non dissemination until a somewhat cleaned-up version was released. The grouping eventually embarked on their own hitch, simply the European dates were canceled when Sixx suffered a do drugs o.d. and nearly lost his life story. Over the next year, all 4 members sought out drug rehabilitation and Mötley Crüe remained out of the spotlight. They returned, clean-living and sober, in 1989 with Dr. Feelgood, which hit number one on the Billboard charts referable to the strong singles "Kickstart My Heart," "Don't Go Away Mad (Simply Go Away)," "Without You," and the ill-famed title-track, which became their number one Top Ten single.


Later on some other world-wide enlistment, they released a digest album, Decade of Decadence, in 1991. The album opened at number 2, and a home video of the like name was released curtly after. The grouping created their possess record label, Mötley Records, and sign-language a new undertake with Elektra for $25 million. Unfortunately by this clock time, the music industry that made them illustrious was commencement to change, and the pressure to restrain footstep with the times began to take its toll on the bandmembers' comradeship. In 1992, roger Sessions for Mötley Crüe's next album sour wretched, and Neil was fired and replaced with singer John Corabi, at one time of the Scream. The 1994 product was Mötley Crüe, which sickly at numeral seven-spot in the U.S. and finally went gold, only was at last a commercial letdown (as was a load-bearing duty tour). In early 1997, Corabi was fired and Neil rehired for the much-hyped Generation Swine. (Corabi resurfaced aboard former Kiss guitarist Bruce Kulick in the radical Union.) Though Generation Swine opened at numeral four-spot, it was acutely criticized and fell off the charts in front long. In 1998, the band released Greatest Hits, just curtly after the encouraging go, Lee was arrested for nuptial mistreat against wife Pamela Anderson and sentenced to poky time for most of the year. Meanwhile, the group's deal with Elektra fell apart, and Mötley Records switched its affiliation to the Beyond label, with the stria acquiring the rights to its endorse catalog.


After numerous bitter encounters with Neil, Tommy Lee left the stria in 1999 to human body Methods of Mayhem, wHO released their self-titled debut late that year; he was replaced with Ozzy Osbourne drummer Randy Castillo. That year, the revamped Crüe issued remastered editions of all their studio albums (complete with bonus tracks) asset the rarities assembling Supersonic and Demonic Relics. An album of all new material, New Tattoo, appeared in the summer of 2000. Also in 2000, Sixx base time to establish a side visualize, 58. On the eve of the Crüe's tour in reenforcement of New Tattoo, Castillo was stricken with an undisclosed illness and sabbatum taboo the duty tour to recuperate. Instead of canceling the tour, the Crüe temporarily enlisted Hole drummer (and lifelong Crüe fan) Samantha Maloney.


In May of 2001, the circle issued an sinful, tell-all biography, The Dirt (which level included input signal from late drummer Lee), that quickly became a best seller. Around the same time, Neil embarked on a brief solo tour of U.S. clubs and looked for a new solo record deal, merely remained diamond that he was still a member of Motley Crüe. Sixx used the downtime to spell material for other bands, including Tantric, Meatloaf, Faith Hill, Tim McGraw, and James Michael. Sadly, Castillo passed away in the natural spring of 2002, and the dance band announced their foramen would plausibly last into the succeeding year. Sixx too began talk more or less reuniting the original batting order for a leave-taking enlistment, just Tommy Lee quickly went to the press and told them that his relationship with Vince Neil was merely overly short for that to bechance. Controversy surrounded the band again as previous manufacturer Tom Werman sued the band for unpaid royalties, Neil's former married woman Heidi Mark publicly accused him of physical clapperclaw, and Neil was kicked off a nationally syndicated radio set prove for being as well rummy to maintain an interview. Tour drummer Samantha Maloney was besides assorted up in things as Sixx distinct to write a ungenerous posting on his web site in retaliation for the world acknowledgment of a feud between her and his wife referable to his unfaithfulness during their 2000 spell. Rumors of a reunion continued to twirl during 2003-04, even as Mötley Crüe members stayed busy with single projects. Both Tommy Lee and Vince Neil participated in celebrity shows, Lee as the focus of a 30 minutes usher on NBC featuring the rock star attention college classes and Neil in the first season of The Surreal Life. Sixx toured and released an album with his new isthmus, Brides of Destruction. The reunion rumors eventually came on-key in tardy 2004 when the four original members announced dates for a full enlistment in 2005, their showtime in more than six age. The tour coincided with the February release of the band's double-disc greatest hits solicitation, Red, White & Crüe.





Kenny Rogers, Edson Hudson

Saturday 28 June 2008

Hi-Five

Hi-Five   
Artist: Hi-Five

   Genre(s): 
Dance
   



Discography:


Feelin' You   
 Feelin' You

   Year: 2003   
Tracks: 3




A Southwestern adolescent R&B corps de ballet, Hi-Five plant success with a levelheaded that updates elements of the Jackson 5 and New Edition. Tony Thompson, Roderick Clark, Russell Neal, Marcus Sanders, and Toriano Easley were the original members. Treston Irby replaced Easley on their second base loss. Hi-Five debuted on Jive in 1990 with Hi-Five. They scored a Top Ten pour down attain with "I Can't Wait Another Minute" and also landed a figure one pop single in "I Like the Way (The Kissing Game)." Their 1992 LP Observe It Goin' On had another Top Ten pour down attain in "She's Playing Hard to Get." After disbanding in the mid-'90s, Thompson re-formed Hi-Five with fresh members and released the album The Return in 2005. Tragically, Thompson died of an apparent drug o.d. on June 1, 2007, in his hometown of Waco, TX.





Keb' Mo'

Protogroup

Protogroup   
Artist: Protogroup

   Genre(s): 
Ambient
   



Discography:


Love Gives Strength To My Soul   
 Love Gives Strength To My Soul

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 10




 






MC Hammer

MC Hammer   
Artist: MC Hammer

   Genre(s): 
Hip-Hop
   



Discography:


Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em   
 Please Hammer, Don't Hurt 'Em

   Year: 1990   
Tracks: 13




There had been hit belt singles and albums before him, only MC Hammer was the adult male wHO sincerely brought whang music to a mass pop audience. Armed with a flamboyant wardrobe (in particular his trademark sloppy chute drawers) and a raft of sampled meat hooks upraised straight from their sources, Hammer's talents as a dancer and showman far exceeded his technique as an MC. Still, he had an ear for catchy source material, and that helped his second gear record album, Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em, become the best-selling rap album of all time. Even if he was ne'er capable to duplicate that level of success, and even if his street credibleness was near nonexistent, Hammer noneffervescent bust downward legion doors for blame music in the mainstream, demonstrating that hip-hop had the potential difference for megahit success in the marketplace.


MC Hammer was born Stanley Kirk Burrell in Oakland, CA, on March 30, 1962. A penis of a strongly religious family, he landed a line as a bat/ball son for the Oakland Athletics baseball game team, where he amused fans by dance during breaks in the game, and earned the cognomen "Hammer" for his resemblance to all-time home run loss leader "Hammerin'" Hank Aaron. An aspirant baseball player himself, he failed to get on with a professional organization undermentioned high school, and enlisted in the Navy for trio years. Long a fan of funk and soulfulness, he became interested in hip-hop upon reverting to civilian life, and began acting in local clubs; with the fiscal help of several Athletics players, he also started his own record mark, Bust It, and recorded a couple of popular local singles. With ex-Con Funk Shun originator Felton Pilate producing, Hammer recorded an album coroneted Feel My Power in 1987. After impressing a Capitol Records executive with his already refine live designate, he was signed to a multi-album deal, the first of which was a revamped version of Find My Power retitled Let's Get It Started. Producing an R&B hit in "Plow This Mutha Out," Let's Get It Started went double platinum.


Noneffervescent, nil could have foreshadowed the phenomenon of Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em, the 1990-released followup. Its first-class honours degree single, "U Can't Touch This," blatantly copped nigh of its hooks from Rick James' funk classic "Super Freak," nevertheless Hammer's added hitch phrases (and loretta Young listeners' strangeness with the original song) helped make it a smash up. "U Can't Touch This" dominated wireless and MTV during 1990 in a way few tap singles e'er had, and north Korean won deuce Grammys (C. H. Best R&B Song, Best Solo Rap Performance); write for a crotchet in its freeing initialize -- it was merely available as a 12", which cut down on its sales -- it would easily take been the first-class honours degree rap single to top the Billboard pop chart. The next deuce singles, "Take in You Seen Her" (a flat out cover of the Chi-Lites' '70s mortal lay) and "Pray" (reinforced on the keyboard swipe from Prince's "When Doves Cry"), followed "U Can't Touch This" into the Top Ten, eventually push gross revenue of Please Hammer Don't Hurt 'Em past the ten-million mark and making it the number one record album of the yr. Still, a backlash was maturation against Hammer's frequent borrowing (some aforesaid stealing) of classic maulers for his possess hits; hip-hop purists besides railed around his frequently simplistic, repetitive lyrics (so, "Pray" set a unexampled record for the number of times its title was perennial during the birdcall, at well over century). The charges of rank mercantilism weren't vitiated by the selling machine that shortly kicked in: endorsement deals, MC Hammer dolls, even a Saturday dawn cartoon prove.


Seeking to countercheck the critique, Hammer dropped the "MC" from his name and used more live instrumentation on his 1991 followup album, Also Legit to Quit. While it sold very well (over three-million copies) and produced a respectable hit in the title cartroad, Hammer's stage indicate had become as plushy as his life style; loaded with singers, dancers, and accompaniment musicians, the supporting concert tour was too expensive for the album's sales to finance, and it was canceled partway through and through. Hammer scored his last self-aggrandising impinge on with "Addams Groove," the subject to the celluloid adaptation of The Addams Family, and then paused to reconsider his access. In 1994, he returned with The Funky Headhunter, a harder-edged, more aggressive record that went gold, but failed to gain ground him a novel audience among hardcore hip-hop fans. On 1995's Inside Out, Hammer seemed uncertain of whether he wanted to appeal to pop or tap audiences; the record album flopped, and Hammer was let out of his squeeze. In 1996, Hammer filed for bankruptcy, his taste for opulence having gotten the better of his dwindling income; his sign was sold at a fraction of its cost. The crisis prompted a religious reawakening, and he began to spell fresh material with an emphasis on church property and family unit. The album Syndicate Affair was slated for release on Hammer's own Oaktown 3.5.7. label, only plans were aborted at the last minute; only grand copies were pressed, and were never distributed nationally, save for limited Internet downloads. Several projects were rumored to be in the works, including another album (State of war Chest: Turn of the Century) and a soundtrack to the celluloid Return to Glory: The Powerful Stirring of the Black Man, but none ever appeared. Finally, Hammer released a modern album, the patriotic-themed Active Duty, through his possess WorldHit label in late 2001.






BIG BROTHER: Dennis Is Out!

Dennis has become the second housemate to be booted from the Big Brother house for “unacceptable” behaviour.

As we reported earlier today, Dennis became involved in an argument with other housemates in the early hours of the morning, during which he spat in Mohamed's face.

E4's live streaming was suspended as BB sought to break-up the the argument.

After sending the housemates to separate bedrooms, Dennis and Mohamed were called separately to the diary room to discuss the incident.

After reviewing footage of 'spit-gate', a decision was made to remove Dennis from the house.

A Channel 4 spokeswoman said: "Spitting in someone's face is seriously offensive and Mohamed was understandably upset.

"Big Brother has very clear rules about offensive behaviour. Like all housemates Dennis was clearly informed before entering the house that he faced eviction if he acted in an unacceptable manner."

Tonight's eviction vote - involving Mohamed and Sylvia - will go ahead as planned.

Peter Gabriel brings world together through music

OK, so cut Peter Gabriel some slack for taking too long to finish an album: "Big Blue Ball," a long-simmering world music project he launched back in 1991, is finally surfacing today.

In the intervening 17 years, he's released four other collections of his music, launched an innovative U.K.-based music download website (www.We7 .com), continued nurturing WOMAD, the world music and dance festival he initiated in 1982 and started a lifestyle-driven site (thefilter.com).

He also assembled The Elders, a group of about a dozen veteran world leaders, including former South African President Nelson Mandela, former U.S. President Jimmy Carter and former U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan, with the aim of bringing their collective experience to bear on the planet's social and political problems.





Meanwhile, "Big Blue Ball" sat. And sat. And sat. But in truth only partly because of Gabriel's many other interests and commitments. In some respects, it's taken nearly two decades for Gabriel and his collaborators to get a lasso around this large-scale effort.

Over the course of four years, Gabriel threw open the doors of his Real World recording studios for a week at a time, 24 hours a day. That way, musicians he'd invited from around the world to participate in WOMAD would have a forum to collaborate during the course of that event on new sounds and new ideas, unencumbered by geographical, musical or budgetary limitations.

Creative, collaborative

"Big Blue Ball" features collaborations between Gabriel and U.S. roots-gospel group the Holmes Brothers (on the album's first single, "Burn You Up, Burn You Down"), Irish singer Iarla O Lionaird and Papa Wemba's Congolese band and Japanese percussionist Joji Hirota with Sinead O'Connor. About half the songs are sung in English, others are in Arabic, Congolese, Hungarian, Swahili and Madagascar languages.

It's eclectic, but there's a rhythmic pulse to most of the tracks that underscores the many-cultures, one-world idea behind the project.

"We knew we only had this collection of people for a limited time, some of them for just two or three days," Gabriel said from his Real World headquarters in Box Wiltshire in the countryside west of London. "So we decided to spend all time recording and performing and waste none of the time sorting it out. With the many, many tapes, which we were still using in those days, it was a bit of a nightmare."

Engineer Richard Chappell, who worked on virtually all the sessions, recalled that "in the first year, nobody quite knew what to do. In the second year, people started to get more excited about what was happening, and by the third time people had really figured it out. We'd have up to 20 different recording sessions going on in various places at the same time. If it wasn't raining, there'd be people set up outside with portable studios."

Gabriel gave the task of sorting through mountains of raw material to Stephen Hague, who has produced albums by Pet Shop Boys, Robbie Williams and others, Chappell and mixing engineer Tchad Blake.

"There were a lot of wonderful performances," Hague said in a separate interview, "but a lot of them were really unformed . . . My background is more in contemporary pop music, and I'm a real structuralist. My goal was to try to get these things to read from beginning to end, and in the end, I think the album reflects that."

Gabriel and his main "Big Blue Ball" partner, Karl Wallinger of World Party, were more interested in songs than an free-form international jam session.

"Jamming can be fantastic for those people who are participating in it, but it's not always great for the audience," Gabriel said. "So Karl and I mostly stayed in the upstairs room and tried to steer people more toward actual songwriting."

New facet

Recently he's said he thinks of "Big Blue Ball" as a fine wine, released only after it had been aged properly. Not only that, but it also represents something larger for a performer whose career has been defined by a commitment to exploding conventions, either through his epic prog-rock excursions as the original lead singer of Genesis, through his genre-bending solo albums of the '70s and '80s and through his groundbreaking music videos in the early days of MTV.

Whereas some musicians strive for hit singles, still others for philosophical or political statements in themed albums, Gabriel is ever on the lookout for ways to change the fundamental shape of what music can and should be.

"I always thought the digital revolution would actually change the content of music, the way same way the piano roll or the 45 rpm single did," he said. "But it's been very slow to come. I really feel there should be a cultural renaissance that digital technology could advance. So even though this project is 15 years old, I think it's still a precursor to a day when people all over the world can work together to generate new ideas."

"Now, not only can we make records very cheaply, but the costs of distribution have been virtually eliminated," Gabriel continued. "And I've always thought that should result in all sorts of things should and could happen, like collaborations left, right and center. We should begin to see more artists like Damon Albarn and Jack White, who can be part of two or three projects simultaneously rather than being locked into one identity."

And how did this forward-thinking musician choose to introduce this project to the world? The first version of "Big Blue Ball" was released in vinyl LP form two weeks ago, ahead of the CD and download editions available today.

"I actually like the fact that young kids today are getting heavily into vinyl again," Gabriel said. "It's always had a very warm sound, so even though I'm a huge digital fan, there's still something to be said for analog -- in the same way that there's still something to a bunch of musicians sitting around in the same room playing together, as opposed to recording alone in their bedrooms."

randy.lewis@latimes.com

Roger Hodgson

Roger Hodgson   
Artist: Roger Hodgson

   Genre(s): 
Rock
   



Discography:


Take The Long Way Home: Live In Montreal   
 Take The Long Way Home: Live In Montreal

   Year: 2006   
Tracks: 18


Open the Door   
 Open the Door

   Year: 2000   
Tracks: 10


In The Eye Of The Storm   
 In The Eye Of The Storm

   Year: 1984   
Tracks: 7




Best known for his stint fronting fine art crop up hitmakers Supertramp, Roger Hodgson was born in Portsmouth, England, on March 21, 1950. He co-founded Supertramp in 1969, serving as their elementary isaac Bashevis Singer and songwriter for 13 days. Originally funded by Dutch millionaire Stanley August Mieseages, the mathematical group lost his patronages afterward their number one deuce albums failed to sire practically interest. However, 1974's Crime of the Century was a major hit, launch the radio favorites "Escapist" and "Bloody Well Right." After grading an external shoot in 1977 with "Give a Little Bit" from the album Tied in the Quietest Moments..., Supertramp reached their commercial-grade point with 1979's chart-topping Breakfast in America, which yielded the smashes "Have the Long Way Home," "The Logical Song," and "Au revoir, Stranger" on its way to selling close to 20 meg copies. In the wake of 1982's ...Far-famed Last Words..., Hodgson left Supertramp to rise a solo career, issue his debut drive, In the Eye of the Storm, in 1984. Within years of issue the review, 1987's Hai Hai, Hodgson fell and skint both of his wrists; the accident unbroken him out of natural action for several days, and he did non resurface until co-writing several songs on Yes' 1994 album Lecture. A live solo record album, Rites of Passage, followed three days later and featured Hodgson collaborating with word Andrew. Open the Door, his low new studio endeavor in 13 days, appeared in the spring of 2000. The album received positive responses from critics and fans likewise, and Hodgson was later recruited to enlistment with Ringo Starr as a fellow member of the All-Starr Band. He continued to diddle solo shows as well, cathartic a DVD of one such performance (Take The Long Way Home -- Live in Montreal) in summer 2006. The DVD would go atomic number 78 in Canada by that October.






Mtv - Mtv To Allow Political Ads


Reversing a policy that was established at its inception, MTV announced Tuesday that it will accept political ads for the first time during the coming election campaign. The company's announcement said that the ads must be "national in scope," presumably meaning that they will be limited to the presidential campaign, and must be sponsored by the candidate or his party or his campaign committee. In an interview with Advertising Age, MTV spokeswoman Jeannie Kedas said that the new policy would compliment the channel's current "Choose or Lose" get-out-the-vote effort. "It's a good thing when candidates want to reach out to young people and the best way to do that is through MTV," she said. AdAge quoted Democratic campaign strategist Tad Devine as saying that the network's policy shift would most likely benefit the Obama campaign.





See Also

See Radiohead's Opening Victoria Park Show In Pictures!

Radiohead triumphed on the first date of their UK tour last night at London's Victoria Park, despite playing a set devoid of many of their biggest hits.


Playing in front of their free Tibet flags and impressive tubular LED lighting display, the band kick-started their set with '15 Step', before launching fellow In Rainbows tracks into Bodysnatchers and 'All I Need.'


As always Thom Yorke kept the crowd interaction at a minimum only greeting the crowd with “Alright!” two songs in.


The set picked up pace with 'The National Anthem' after which Thom told a woman in the crowd “I love you too darling” to great applause.


A relatively rare outing of Dollars and Cents was followed by a glorious 'Just' and later a spine-tingling 'Climbing Up The Walls.'


Introducing 'The Reckoner', Yorke said “This is our peace tune, kind of please let it not be the end of everything song.” The crowd then chanted “Free Tibet” in reference to the flags on the stage.


As it got darker, the set grew in intensity. The band relied on predominately down-tempo tracks  like 'Videotape' and a stunning 'How To Disappear Completely' that suited the ambience perfectly.


For the final encore, the band played Thom Yorke's solo track 'Cymbal Rush', which appeared on his 2006 album 'The Eraser', before Yorke played 'You and Whose Army' on his own, staring intensely into the camera.


It was the final song – an abrasive techno-tinged 'Idioteque' – that undoubtedly provided the highlight of the evening.


Click through below to see the gig in pictures. The full set was:


15 Step

Bodysnatchers

All I Need

The National Anthem

Pyramid Song

Nude

Arpeggi

The Gloaming

Dollars and Cents

Faust Arp

There There

Just

Climbing Up The Walls

Reckoner

Everything In Its Right Place

How To Dissappear Completely

Jigsaw Falling Into Place


Videotape

Airbag

Bangers ‘n Mash

Planet Telex

The Tourist



Cymbal Rush

You And Whose Army?

Idioteque




See Also