Tuesday, May 10, 2011

'Thor' Opens With Chart-Topping $66 Million

 

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(RTTNews) - Even with some intense competition from "Fast Five," action release "Thor" dominated the box office charts this weekend, earning more than $16,000 per site and $66 million overall. "Fast Five" also had another strong weekend, as the fifth film in the "Fast and the Furious" franchise pushed its ten-day domestic total to a 2011-best $139 million domestically. "Jumping the Broom" also had a positive opening of $13.70 million at just 2,035 total theaters, while "Something Borrowed" opened with a mediocre $13.16 million despite a much larger release.
With the opening of "Thor," the summer action release schedule is underway, as the hopeful franchise from Paramount hit with its target demographic and looks to be a big box officesuccess. Not only did "Thor" rake in $66 million in the U.S., but it's already doing significant business abroad, bringing its worldwide total to $242 million. Though releases that aren't sequels or adaptations rarely finish among the very top releases of the year, "Thor" looks to be good for $600 or $700 million worldwide before all is said and done.
The tremendous opening of "Thor" is also the second biggest of the year, trailing only the $86 million that "Fast Five" opened with a week ago. In 2010, only five of the biggest movies of the year earned more than $66 million in their opening weekends and all soared well past $200 million in domestic receipts.
"Thor" is also boasting very strong critical reviews, which should help its audience appeal over the next couple of weekends. Also helping is a weak release schedule for this Friday, as the widest release will be action-horror film "Priest" at just 2,800 theaters. Look for "Thor" to put together one more strong weekend and end up with a very impressive ten-day total.


What's most impressive about the opening of "Thor" is that it had to compete with "Fast Five," which continued to do fairly well in its second weekend in theaters. Though "Fast Five" dipped more than 60% from its opening totals, it still hauled in a very solid $35 million and pushed its ten-day total to a year-best $139 million. "Fast Five" has also done well internationally, bringing its worldwide total to $324 million worldwide already. Look for "Fast Five" and "Thor" to continue to do very well with action audiences until the latest "Pirates of the Caribbean" opens on May 20.
Aiming for a much smaller audience was the low-budgeted comedy "Jumping the Broom." With a minimal budget of just $6.6 million and a small release around 2,000 total venues, "Jumping the Broom" earned a solid $6,732 per theater and $13.70 million overall. Though "Jumping the Broom" will likely see a significant slide next weekend, it already looks to be a nice success for distributor TriStar.
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Kicks Like You Ain’t Never Seen: Van Halen’s Fair Warning Album and Tou

WEDNESDAY, 4 MAY 2011

Marriage delayed work on the band’s fourth album. Torn between his new domestic bliss and a helter-skelter career in Van Halen, Eddie grew disillusioned with the band and wanted to quit. In his book Kiss and Make-up, Gene Simmons reported that a distraught Eddie at least halfheartedly made motions toward defecting Van Halen and joining Kiss as a second guitarist. “We thought Kiss with Eddie Van Halen on second guitar was an exciting idea,” Simmons wrote, “but if it came to pass what would his makeup character be?”
Certainly Eddie’s qualms were serious enough that Alex later claimed to have convinced Eddie to keep Van Halen together. “On the whole album I was angry, frustrated, and loose,” Eddie admitted. It was a dark time for him personally.
Consequently, Fair Warning was a major departure from the playfulness of Women and Children First. Before work began in the winter of early 1981, Roth had spent a few royalty checks for a glamorous jungle adventure to Haiti and had been punched with an emaciated paw in his conscience. He saw poverty and corruption in doses unavailable in Pasadena or Indiana, and he came back to the fractious Van Halen camp ready for a revolution of his own.
The record brought back the dynamics of the debut album, the silences and rhythm-section showcases that formed the full heavy metal machine. At the same time, it was much denser. Musically, almost every song had thick overdubs on the rhythm and lead guitar tracks, and the band recorded using smaller studio amps to control the sound instead of capturing it directly from typical high-decibel stage rigs. The sunshine backing vocals were held to a minimum.
Alex's original idea for the Fair Warning album cover
The album cover was also odd, a collection of drawings of violent street situations, each panel loosely corresponding to a song on the album. The images were chosen and arranged by Van Halen’s lighting designer turned all-purpose creative
director, Pete Angelus, based on paintings by troubled Canadian-Ukrainian prairie artist William Kurelek. Alex had discovered the paintings, and instead of a collage he initially was interested in only one image: a man ramming his head into a wall.
This tough fourth album declared the band’s reign over the rising tide of heavy music. They were pictured uncharacteristically wearing black leather, nodding to the British metal sound just arriving in the United States. Yet Van Halen remained wary of the term “heavy metal.” They had Americanized heavy metal, styling their hair and projecting exuberance and confidence instead of the dour attitudes of their European counterparts. As Roth said, “This is not like Judas Priest and Black Sabbath—that’s for young boys. I maintain that Van Halen is for everybody.”
Oozing with menace, Fair Warning was the closest Van Halen ever came to a thematic concept album, a suite of songs about life in the ruts. The opening cut, “Mean Street,” became an anthem. Beginning with Eddie’s fast-motion slapping pattern on high and low E strings, a technique he adapted from funk bass, the track stepped into skid-row territory instead of strolling down Main Street. The main riff was lifted from the band’s midseventies staple “Voodoo Queen,” while the funky transitional riff came from their “She’s the Woman.” Now past the point of reusing old songs, Eddie was chopping and rearranging the hot moments of his back catalog.
Fair Warning was a masterpiece made in the studio, not honed like past albums in the clubs before recording. While demoing the song as a work in progress, Dave slurred the lyrics in a monotonous jive, hustling the band toward a bang-up heavy metal can-can finale, far flashier than anything used on the album.
Eddie again picked up a guitar slide for “Dirty Movies,” though he had trouble reaching the high notes on his SG-shaped Gibson Les Paul Junior. Ever one to bend his tools to fit his needs, he sawed a chunk off the vintage guitar so he could play the song the way he thought it should sound.
Eddie claimed “Push Comes to Shove” was a nod to dub reggae, instigated by Roth. If so, the template for dread-rock fusion was years ahead of similar sultry tracks by Rastafarian punks Bad Brains or the Red Hot Chili Peppers.
Saved as a big punch for the start of side two, “Unchained” was the biggest riff since “Runnin’ with the Devil”—a barrel-chested headbanger built on crunchy guitar, Roth’s screams, and a plowing bass line that left Michael Anthony free for high-pitched backing vocals. At the end of the guitar solo, the band pulled back while Roth ribbed the control room like a street-corner wiseguy running a friend through the dozens. “Hey man, that suit is you! You’ll get some leg tonight for sure!” “C’mon Dave, gimme a break,” Ted Templeman punched in from the control room, and a legendary ad-lib was born, a peek behind the curtain of the Wizard of Van Halen. As with most of the band’s off-the-cuff turns, however, each peck of brilliance was meticulously rehearsed. On the preproduction versions of “Unchained,” Roth delivered the “Gimme a break!” line himself.
Ted Templeman: “C’mon Dave, gimme a break!”
Eddie and Templeman often came to screaming fights over overdubs, with Templeman refusing to allow multitracking that the band could never re-create onstage. He nixed a version of “Unchained” where Eddie had split his guitar with a harmonizer so that the sound in the right speaker was a muddy octave lower. Some days the team were best friends, sometimes Templeman was the enemy. Eddie later admitted to sneaking into the studio with engineer Donn Landee behind Templeman’s back. Significantly, Eddie’s need for more control pushed him to begin plans to build his own home studio with Landee’s help. Though brief instrumentals like “Eruption” were now part and parcel of a Van Halen package, Fair Warning’s “Sunday Afternoon in the Park” was a complete departure. Composed quickly by Eddie on an Electro-Harmonix synthesizer, allegedly for his new wife, the funky two-minute track fit the album’s mood perfectly. The synth rock pulsed as hard as any rudimentary electro music, resembling squelching European synth devils like the Italian horror soundtrack group Goblin or England’s cold-blooded Gary Numan.
Closing the record was “One Foot Out the Door,” a fast rocker built on another burbling synth line. The song was reputedly captured in one take as the band was literally heading out the door of Sunset Sound after finishing the record.
After a reviewer in Rolling Stone predictably tore up the album, Valerie Bertinelli threw the band a congratulatory celebration. Regardless of what a magazine that had yet to put them on the cover thought, Fair Warning established the band artistically and proved Van Halen mattered beyond a party environment. At one point or another, all four members later declared it their favorite early Van Halen record and defended its virtues.
Launched in April 1981, Fair Warning set a new chart high for the band by peaking at  number 5 on the Billboard chart. The problem was there was no obvious radio hit. “Mean Street,” “Push Comes to Shove,” and “Unchained” all cracked the Top 30 rock list, but the mainstream pop hit that the record label wanted eluded them. In the eyes of the band’s business partners, that was a flaw. As much as the music industry pretended to be results-driven, there was a pack mentality that craved marketable hits.
Roth liked to say that Van Halen had played Lima, Ohio, and Lima, Peru, Paris, Texas, and Paris, France, and every place in between. But except for rehearsal sessions in Halifax, Nova Scotia, and a few subsequent gigs north of the border, the Fair Warning tour in 1981 never left the country. The band’s operation had become too massive, requiring a small city of support staff and hardware. The four weeks of tour rehearsal alone cost almost $100,000 in crew salaries plus stage and gear rental. The actual tour budget named expenses like $5,000 for an “ego ramp” reaching into the crowd, $1,000 for Alex’s fire effect, a whopping $4,000 for backstage passes, and $2,500 for dance lessons. Instead of burning audiences in the corneas with a straightforward light show, the Fair Warning stage setup brought the bad side of town to the suburbs. A bluesy urban street scene unfolded on a massive backdrop while Van Halen ripped through darker material like “Sinner’s Swing.” Meanwhile, Alex acquired a massive gong behind his kit, which he lit in a circle of flame and bashed repeatedly to bring the show to a climax.
During 1981, the band sold out three nights at the Philadelphia Spectrum and two nights at the Capital Centre in D.C. The New York Times gave the band’s Madison Square Garden appearance a respectful nod, describing the three-ring circus administered by Roth with the help of “right hand man” Eddie Van Halen. The newspaper of record even credited “the heavy-metal brand of hard rock” with keeping the record business afloat.
Though the full tour was too expensive to haul to Europe, Van Halen appeared on Dutch television. On the streets of Amsterdam, Dave was comically brushed off by passersby, except for a well-meaning elderly man who thought he was a French tourist. Dave found his bandmates near a wurst wagon and mock-interviewed them about Van Halen. Eddie and Alex began rapidly discussing the band in Dutch. They pretended to be starstruck by the arrival of bassist Michael Anthony—a man so unpresumptuous that he still admitted to being thrilled when fans asked him to sign autographs.
Dave continued questioning the band as they cruised the Amsterdam canals. Eddie replied in his native Dutch: “The best city in the world, with the best beer and the best romance.” He and Alex glowed with pride, enjoying the royal treatment twenty years after leaving the country as small boys.
Par for the course, Fair Warning was platinum by year’s end, but sales of each of the band’s first four albums pointed toward a slight downward trend. The band shot a music video in a foggy forest near a giant brontosaurus sculpture, but the footage was never edited because the record label saw no need to promote an album without a single. That insatiable appetite for airplay would hang over the band during their next record.

This entire entry is from the book “Everybody Wants Some: The Van Halen Saga” by Ian Christe. The book is available at VanHalenStore.com and we think it’s the best history of the band ever written. (All photos from VHND).

Friday, April 29, 2011

Stevie Nicks Premieres Video For 'Secret Love'


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(RTTNews) - Stevie Nicks has released a video for her new single "Secret Love." The track is taken from her first solo album in a decade, In Your Dreams.
The "Secret Love" video features both younger and older versions of Nicks. She appears alongside a white horse, a sinister photographer and ghostly apparitions. The video was shot in Nicks' home and backyard during recording sessions for In Your Dreams.
The video was directed by Eurythmicsguitarist Dave Stewart, who also co-produced the album.
"I wanted to make it like my younger 25-year-old spirit blending with my 62-year-old spirit," Nicks told Spinner.com. "Sometimes your young self, when you look back, is not very much different than your older self. We worked really hard on it and I just hope that people love it, because I really love it."
In Your Dreams is due out May 3 through Reprise Records

Jeremy Renner Linked To Steve McQueen Biopic

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4/29/2011 10:33 AM ET 
"The Hurt Locker" star Jeremy Renner has reportedly signed on to appear in a new biopic of Hollywood legend Steve McQueen. The film will be produced by Renner's production company The Combine and will draw from Marshall Terrill's book about the actor titled "Portrait of an American Rebel." Since bursting onto the scene with his Oscar nominated appearance in "The Hurt Locker," Renner has scored a string of hits including "The Town," for which he also earned an Oscar nod. 

75,000 Applied for 2,000 Local McJobs

Restaurant managers say they plan to hire more in the future

Friday, Apr 29, 2011 | Updated 8:43 AM CDT8
75,000 Applied for 2,000 Local McJobs
Getty Images
By Ivanna Hampton
advertisement
A McJob looked mighty appealing to tens of thousands of people in the Chicago area.
More than 75,000 job-seekers applied for 2,000 area positions with McDonald's during the fast food king's first-ever "National Hiring Day" on April 19. 
Applicants packed franchises in Illinois, Southern Wisconsin and Northwest Indiana. McDonald's filled all 2,000 jobs, including more than 1,000 posts in the Chicago area alone, a McDonald's spokesperson said. 
Oak Brook-based McDonald Corp. offered 50,000 positions nationwide as part of the April 19 job fair.
The openings were for full- and part-time restaurant crew and management positions, which translate to about three or four new hires per store. Applicants were asked to apply at franchises or online.  MULTIMEDIA

Job offers took a couple of weeks, administrators said, because of mandatory background checks.
Some called the large-scale hiring day a stunt to make hires McDonald's would have made anyway, but the company said the 50,000 jobs represent an upswing in employment opportunities after turnover slowed in recent years.
Locals didn't disagree.
For the 73,000 that didn't land a new job with the company, the hiring isn't over.
Restaurant managers expect to boost staffing in the future, the company said. 
McDonald's boasts about 1.7 million employees worldwide. The nationwide hiring spree is expected to increase its U.S. workforce by seven percent to 700,000.


Thursday, April 28, 2011

Production Has Begun On 'The Avengers'

 
 
 
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4/26/2011 6:37 PM ET
Writer and director Joss Whedon has confirmed that production has officially kicked off on "The Avengers." In an official update to his website, the "Buffy the Vampire Slayer" creator stopped just short of revealing the shooting location for the film's most pivotal scene. "Tomorrow we start shooting. Day one. That's right. I THINK I'm legally permitted to say that," Whedon writes in the post. He continues on to tease fans about the filming locations.

Wednesday, April 27, 2011

Rob Schneider Marries Long-time Girlfriend

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4/26/2011 2:27 PM ET
Rob Schneider has tied the knot with his girlfriend, Mexican television producer Patricia Azarcoya Arce. The longtime couple celebrated their union in a small celebration in Beverly Hills and, according to the actor everything went well for the newlyweds. "Patricia and I were surrounded by our closest friends and family; it was the happiest day of my life. We had a great time at the wedding and are looking forward to our honeymoon," Schneider revealed in a statement.

The Kenny Wayne Shepherd Band Set New Album Release

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Charlie Sheen Bails Lenny Dykstra Out Of Jail

KISS leader Gene Simmons in studio: "I'm an idiot!"

Friday, 22 April 2011
KISS leader Gene Simmons in studio: "I'm an idiot!"
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Gene Simmons "I'm an idiot!" Really?

KISS founding member and lead bassist (yes, we just wrote lead bassist) Gene Simmons admits in studio and on camera for all to see! "I'm an idiot!" Well, you said it Gene, not us. Lol.

KISS has been logging various studio clips of them in studio recording and doing demos for new music. Check out clips with Paul Stanley, Gene "I'm an idiot" Simmons, Tommy "FrankenAce" Thayer and Eric Singer (insert short joke here).

Gene video with the infmaous "I'm an idiot" line is right HERE

Paul Stanley up close and personal talking about Gene Simmons nylons HERE

Metal Sludge
Metal Idiot

Black Sabbath not fit for reunion

 

 
Tuesday, April 26th, 2011
Ozzy doesn’t think all four members have what it takes to regroup and hints he’s fallen out with bassist Butler


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Unfit for action: Sabbath during their 1999 reunion
Ozzy Osbourne doesn’t believe all four members of Black Sabbath have what it takes to stage another reunion.
But he hasn’t ruled out the move, despite Geezer Butler stating it will never happen.
In February the bassist said: “I would like to make it clear, because of mounting speculation and rumours, that there will definitely be no reunion of all four original members of Black Sabbath, whether to record an album or tour.”
Before that, Osbourne suggested Butler’s attitude was one of the main hurdles to a regrouping, explaining: “If I do it, Geezer has got to promise to stop moaning. I love him, but he’s always on about something.”
Now the singer suggests he and the bassist are not on speaking terms. He tells VH1: “I’ve spoken to Tony Iommi, I speak to Bill Ward from time to time, but I haven’t spoken to Geezer for a while.”
And he has another doubt: “To be honest, I don’t think we can all physically do it. I’m up for it and I keep fit every day. But if it’s meant to happen, it’ll happen.”
Recent rumours suggest some kind of reunion has been discussed, following the death of Ronnie James Dio last year, which brought the career of alternative lineup Heaven and Hell to an end.
Osbourne says: “If it happens in one configuration, I suppose we’ll manage to go out. I don’t want to say too much because I don’t really know.”
The frontman, who’s currently touring new solo album Scream, said in January that Sabbath would be under a huge amount of pressure if they decided to make their first studio album since he left in 1980, commenting: “If it’s not extra, extra special, people are going to go, ‘We waited 30 years for this?’ But I’d love to do the ultimate Black Sabbath album.”

Monday, April 25, 2011

'Rio' soars on Easter weekend

 

Toon tops holiday frame with $26.8 mil

In what was expected to be a tight race between "Rio" and "Tyler Perry's Madea's Big Happy Family," 20th Century Fox's 3D animated pic managed to hang on to the domestic B.O.'s top spot with an estimated $26.8 million, showing the expected strength of families at the multiplexes during Easter weekend. Perry's brand popularity among ethnic auds and with families on Easter Sunday has made him a consistent player over the holiday, this time with Lionsgate's "Happy Family" posting a solid $25.8 million.
"Rio," which has cumed $81.3 million domestically, brought in an additional estimated $44.2 million in 67 overseas markets, lifting the international tally passed $200 million. Animated feature's worldwide cume is $286 million, making it 2011's best global performer after just three weeks.
While Fox's toon scored a narrow Stateside victory, Perry's newest pic debuted in line with what pre-weekend tracking had suggested, marking another strong start for the helmer and his fourth-best opener behind "Madea Goes to Jail," with $41 million in 2009, and "Madea's Family Reunion," which bowed to $30 million in 2006. Last year, Perry's "Why Did I Get Married Too?" debuted Easter weekend with $29.3 million, but that was in a more robust market.
Overall grosses this year were up 34% over the same frame in 2010, though it's not a fair comparison since that weekend wasn't a holiday.
Fox's adult-targeted swooner "Water for Elephants" opened well, scoring $17.5 million playing at 2,817 locations. Despite the presence of Robert Pattinson, lit adaptation played overwhelmingly to women over 25, who contributed 70% of the film's opening take.
Meanwhile, Disney's latest Earth Day-timed nature docu, "African Cats," from Disneynature, opened to a solid $6.4 million from 1,220. That's better than the Mouse's "Oceans," which bowed this weekend last year with $6.1 million.
Among the frame's top-holding repeat players, Universal's Easter-themed "Hop" was up 17% over last weekend with an estimated $12.5 million, bringing domestic cume passed $100 million. Overseas, "Hop" took in a projected $10.7 million for an international tally of $47.2 million.
The Weinstein Co.'s "Scream 4," with a cume of $31.2 million through Sunday, dropped a considerable 62% in its second outing, with an estimated $7.2 million for the weekend.
The frame's bottom holdover half, led by Sony's "Soul Surfer," all fell less than 30% -- mostly boosted by increased holiday traffic.
In the No. 7 spot, "Soul Surfer" tallied $5.6 million in its third outing, with a cume of $28.7 million; FilmDistrict's "Insidious," in its fourth frame, followed with $5.4 million, cuming $44.2 million. Kid-assassin thriller "Hanna," from Focus Features, was down 28% with $5.3 million, and Summit's "Source Code" dropped just 18% with $5.1 million. "Hanna" has cumed $31.7 million domestically; "Source Code," $44.7 million.
Easter demo derby
Lionsgate distrib topper David Spitz said "Happy Family" didn't play as young as Perry's previous Madea pic, "Madea Goes to Jail." That's mostly due to the market's recent malaise with under-25 auds as "Happy Family" scored 69% of its opening take from those over 25.
Pundits expect Sunday box office to be down overall, but family films like "Rio" and "African Cats" should fare fine. Traditionally, Perry pics have done exceptionally well on Easter Sunday because the helmer's following also is made up of family filmgoers. "We anticipate a solid Sunday based on his two previous titles," Spitz said.
As expected, "Happy Family" drew 81% of its opening from African-Americans, with strong turnouts in Baltimore, Dallas, Philadelphia and Washington, D.C.
"Rio" and "Hop" both benefited as the majority (68%) of students were out of school on Friday, with many parents off work to spend time with the family. Last week's spring break-fueled mid-week perfs, as well as the holiday lead-in, were primary reasons why Fox and U, respectively, decided to launch their films during the B.O.'s early-to-mid April corridor.
Specialty holiday
Sony Pictures Classics launched a pair of specialty pics in limited release this weekend: Morgan Spurlock's Sundance docu "Pom Wonderful Presents: The Greatest Movie Ever Sold" grossed an estimated $135,139 from 18 U.S. locations, while Oscar foreign-lingo candidate "Incendies" earned $54,582 at three domestic playdates.
"Greatest Movie," with a per-screen average of $7,506, did much better than Spurlock's "Freakonomics," which averaged just $1,595 from 20 debut theaters last year. "Incendies" similarly outmatched Sony Classic's Oscar-winning Danish pic "In a Better World," which bowed Stateside on April 1 with an opening per of $8,264 from a comparable four locations.
Gotham's Metropolitan Opera continued its fifth season of live transmissions Saturday, screening Richard Strauss' "Capriccio" for an estimated $2.09 million in North America. It was seen live on more than 750 screens, with an additional 300 in a total of 32 European and Latin American countries.

Sunday, April 24, 2011

Remaking "Great Gatsby" This Summer

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(RTTNews) - Isla Fisher has been pegged for a role in a film rendition of F. Scott Fitzgerald's classic "The Great Gatsby." The Australian actress may star as Myrtle, who, in the book, is engaged in a lusty yet tragic affair with Tom Buchanan. The latter character was previously supposed to be played by Ben Affleck, but he has since stepped down from the role to direct "Argo."
"The Great Gatsby" takes place during the roaring 1920s when the American economy was on the up-and-up and Prohibition was in force.
Leonardo DiCaprio has agreed to play the film's lead (Jay Gatsby); Tobey Maguire will star as Nick Carraway, the novel's narrator. Carey Mulligan will play Gatsby's love interest, Daisy Buchanan.
Warner Bros. is producing and are looking to start filming sometime this summer. It will be directed by another Australian native, Baz Luhrmann.

Downing: I couldn’t work with Priest any longer

 

Friday, April 22nd, 2011
Guitarist reveals his departure was caused by breakdown in relationship as band hint they could reconsider plans to stop touring



 
KK Downing
Painkiller: Downing opted out after relations strained
 
KK Downing quit Judas Priest over a breakdown in the relationship between his bandmates and management, he has revealed.
And the metal gods have hinted that, now the guitarist has gone, they may reconsider plans to end their touring career.
He took his bandmates by surprise when he told them he was leaving in December, causing them to announce that their upcoming world tour would be their last. A day later they clarified their position, saying they’d continue to record, but their life on the road was coming to an end.
It seems Downing’s position may have been a large factor in the band’s decision-making process – and now he’s decided to leave without playing the Epitaph tour, there’s a chance the rest of Priest will keep touring.
Following the band’s statement about his departure, Downing says: “It is much regret that I will not be with you this summer. But there has been an ongoing breakdown in working relationship between myself, elements of the band, and the band’s management for some time.
“Therefore I have decided to step down rather than tour with negative sentiments. I feel it would be a deception to you, our cherished fans.”
He explains his decision was not motivated by ill-health, adding: “Please rest assured I’m okay, but thank you from the bottom of my heart for your concerns.
“I’d urge you to support the Priest – I have no doubt it will be a show not to be missed.”
Singer Rob Halford admits Downing’s move upset him. He tells Hard Rock: “He told us before Christmas. I thought it could be the end. Emotionally, for me, it’s been very difficult.
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“But it was his own decision, for the reasons he’s made public. He has his own life to live and we can’t force him to do anything he doesn’t wants to do.”
The frontman reveals they hoped he’d reconsider: “We kept the door open all this time in case he changed his mind. But the clock was ticking.”
Meanwhile, drummer Scott Travis has put a question-mark over Priest’s retirement from touring. He says: “It’s never an easy decision to replace any long-time member, but the fans want us to continue, we want to continue, and we have to go on. I think we’ll go on as long as we want to.”
The band will complete the Epitaph tour with Lauren Harris’ guitarist Richie Faulkner. Halford reveals: “KK can never be replaced, and we didn’t want any kind of copycat. Richie went to Glenn’s house to jam, and Glenn told us he was absolutely brilliant.”
Credited with introducing the leather-and-studs look to heavy metal, Judas Priest formed in 1969. They’ve seen a total of 15 members pass through the band, of which eight have been drummers, and of which Downing and bassist Ian Hill were the only two founding members still in residence. They’ve released 16 studio albums in their 42-year career and after the Epitaph tour they’ll start work on a new record, due out in 2012.

Thursday, April 21, 2011

Steve Miller Band News!

We received some big news for Steve Miller Band fans. Not only is the band releasing a new album, but they are also hitting the road with the one and only Gregg Allman! Here is the official word:
The Steve Miller Band return with yet another new offering, Let Your Hair Down, which lands in stores April 19 on Miller's Space Cowboy Records in partnership with Roadrunner/Loud & Proud Records.
The band will kick off the album release with a Spring tour beginning April 19 featuring special guest Gregg Allman.
Prior to the album release and tour, The Steve Miller Band will celebrate the opening of the new Austin City Limits venue at The Moody Theater with a sold out gala concert event to benefit KRLU-TV, Austin PBS, on February 24, followed by the inaugural live taping on February 26.

Let Your Hair Down features the last recordings by harmonica virtuoso Norton Buffalo, Miller's "partner in harmony" for thirty-three years. Noted Pink Floyd album cover artist Storm Thorgerson, who also did the wonderfully whimsical cover to BINGO! returns to Let Your Hair Down with one of the great album covers of his career.
February 23 House of Blues Dallas, TX
February 24 Austin City Limits Gala/Moody Theater Austin, TX - sold out!
February 25 House of Blues Houston, TX
February 26 Austin City Limits/Moody Theater Austin, TX
April 16 Allman Brothers' Wanee Music Festival Live Oak, FL
April 17 Tennessee Theater Knoxville, TN
April 19 North Charleston PAC North Charleston, SC *
April 20 Kota Booth Amphitheater Cary, NC *
April 22 LC Pavilion Columbus, OH *
April 23 Huntington Arena Toledo, OH *
April 26 Tower Theater Philadelphia, PA *
April 27 Kovalchick Complex Indiana, PA *
April 30 Musikfest Café - Arts Quest Center Bethlehem, PA

* featuring special guest Gregg Allman

Additional dates TBA

GREG KIHN DELIVERS 3-DISC COLLECTION:

Greg Kihn is proud to announce the release of a three-disc, all digital anthology box set, entitled Kihnplete (Post Beserkley Records). Kihnplete is a fascinating retrospective of Greg Kihn's vast body of work from the post Beserkley Records era, 1985 to the present. What most Rock Fans don't know is Greg Kihn recorded and performed with some of the best musicians over his illustrious 35-year career. Before breaking big with his own solo career, Joe Satriani was the Greg Kihn Band's lead guitarist during the Post Beserkley Records era 1985 to 1987. Fans of Satch, as he's affectionately referred to, will find eleven incredibly rare, hard-to-find studio and live tracks featuring the guitar prodigy.
In addition, Greg has been the longest reigning #1 Classic Rock Radio morning man in San Jose for 16-years. As of January 2011, The Greg Kihn Morning Show began broadcasting out of downtown San Francisco on KFOX FM 102.1 San Francisco / 98.5 San Jose to the entire Bay Area region; the fourth largest radio market in the USA, reaching millions. Greg is quickly on the way to becoming the #1 morning man in the region on California's largest Classic Rock Super Station. KFOX now affords the celebrities visiting the City of San Francisco a massive audience in where they can promote their events and performances through live interviews with Greg.
Greg is the author of four novels and one book of short stories, all of which will become available digitally for Kindle and iPad in the very near future. Greg has a screenplay in development for a new cable series about how the mafia ran the music industry in New York City during the early 1960's, described as a cross between "The Sopranos-Meets Almost Famous". The complete press release can be viewed at:
x.co/Kihnplete.

3 DOORS DOWN TO RELEASE TIME OF MY LIFE JULY 19:


American Rock Band 3 Doors Down have announced that their much anticipated 5th studio album, Time of My Life (Universal Republic), will be released July 19. Recorded in Los Angeles, with Grammy-nominated producer Howard Benson (Daughtry, Flyleaf, Hoobastank, Three Days Grace) this album shows a clear evolution in 3 Doors Down while maintaining their unmistakable hit-making sound.
“We went into the studio with a goal in mind: we wanted to make a record this time that could really take us up a couple of notches,” said front man Brad Arnold. This is evident from the albums first single, “When You're Young.” The track debuted at #1 on the iTunes Rock singles chart and is currently climbing the Active Rock, Mainstream Rock and Alternative charts. The video for the single premiered last week on AOL and can be viewed on the band's YouTube page. Fans heard a sneak peak of the fast-paced title track, “Time of My Life,” during NHL All Star Weekend where the song was used extensively in highlight reels. The band will play a handful of dates stateside before heading to Europe for a summer tour. For more information and tour dates check out
www.3doorsdown.com.
Time Of My Life Track Listing: 1. Time Of My Life 2. When You're Young 3. Round and Round 4. Heaven 5. Race For The Sun 6. Back To Me 7. Every Time You Go 8. What's Left 9. On The Run 10. She Is Love 11. My Way 12. Believer.

3 DOORS DOWN TO RELEASE TIME OF MY LIFE JULY 19:

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Duff on Celeb Rehab: "I wouldn't have wanted to try & get sober in a public forum."

 
Tuesday, 19 April 2011

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Duff don't dig Celebrity Rehab!

Duff McKagan is best known as the bassist and founding member of Guns N' Roses. He is also a founding member of Velvet Revolver. McKagan has sold more than 100 million records worldwide, won a Grammy and an American Music Award.
In 1999 the musician formed Loaded, which saw him move front and center on guitar and lead vocals. On Tuesday, April 19 Loaded released its second album The Taking, and in an interview with Sterling Whitaker of Examminer . com to promote the record, McKagan also spoke of his disdain for Celebrity Rehab, the popular reality TV show that portrays celebrities undergoing treatment for various forms of addiction.
McKagan's former Guns N' Roses band mate Steven Adler appeared on the show, and when asked if he found that exploitative, the musician answered, "Yes. Absolutely. And the same with [Alice in Chains bassist] Mike Starr. I cringe, I think it's the worst thing for so-called sobriety. 'Hold on, we're having a breakthrough . . .wait, we've gotta do makeup.' You know?
"There's a reason it's anonymous, because if you fail, you're failing on camera," he noted. "You're failing after you've been on this rehab show."
McKagan himself has gotten sober, and said that anonymity is crucial to success. "Somebody didn't just come up with it because it sounds good," he stated. "Anonymous, you don't have to succeed all the time. You can fail, and you can still come back and nobody's gonna judge you. I wouldn't have wanted to try and get sober in a public forum. I don't think it's right so . . . whatever. That's how I feel. It's not cool. "

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