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Broncos meet Brat Pack era in John Parr’s ‘Tim Tebow’s Fire’

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Album Reviews, Gossip, Music, Music Feature, Music News, Pop, Pop Shop  |  January 11, 2012

As an aging Gen-Xer who as of late has become something of a pop culture curmudgeon — “Stop remaking our movies and songs and get your own, hipstersnappers! And stay off my lawn or I’ll Wang Chung your butt!” — I wa slightly fearful when my editor hipped me to “Tim Tebow’s Fire,” ’80′s singer John Parr’s Tebow-specific update of his own Number 1 hit “St. Elmo’s Fire.”

(Cultural note for those under 35 — St. Elmo’s Fire was a movie starring a bunch of then-young actors dubbed The Brat Pack, including Charlie Sheen’s brother, Ashton Kutcher’s soon-to-be ex-wife, Meredith Grey’s dead stepmother from Grey’s Anatomy and Chris Traeger from Parks and Recreation. It was about the difficulty of being middle-class, gorgeous Georgetown graduates in a Reagan-era world that just didn’t give breaks to people like them. Snerk.)

Apparently Parr, whose other big hit was the inspirationally smutty “Naughty Naughty” (Sample lyrics: “Naughty naughty, cute and horny, t-t-t-tease me”) was inspired by Tebow’s convictions and the way he plays them out on the field and off. So he adapted “St. Elmo’s Fire,” whose original version was inspired by Canadian athlete Rick Hansen, who traveled the world in his wheelchair to bring attention to spinal cord injuries. He swapped out some of the lyrics for more appropriate Tebow-esque phrases, using “All I need is my Broncos team” rather than “All I need is a pair of wheels.”
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Dutch magazine slurs Rihanna, and gets offended that she was offended

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Celeb Stalker, Gossip, Music, Pop, Pop Shop, R&B, Weird news, commentary  |  December 26, 2011

Don't cross her. She has a Twitter account.

 

I am almost loathe to write about this, because the feedback could be brutal. But I must.

Apparently, some Dutch fashion magazine called Jackie thought it would be nifty and funny to do a fashion spread about how to dress just like Rihanna. I know lots of people who would love to dress like Rihanna. But they might not want to if they knew that dressing that way makes them look like a – and I was not aware that this was a thing- a “n—ab—h”. Yes. That happened. And Rihanna is apparently “the ultimate n—ab—-h”.

The red-headed wonder was shockingly not thrilled about this achievement, and rather than asking that this be placed on a plaque, sent a profane Tweet to the editors of Jackie. While I might not have sent a profane Tweet while trying to prove that I was not low-class or profane or whatever that horrible word is supposed to be, I can’t blame the girl for being mad. Because they called her a … y’all, I’m not even gonna type that anymore, because it’s hard to type and because it’s stupid. How do you not know that’s offensive? Ack!

The best part of this is the response of the magazine. The editor responsible for the story quit, saying that she was sorry that she hadn’t realized that it was OK to call somebody that, and that it was a joke. Ha Ha. And then the publishers wrote a statement saying that, essentially, they were sorry that their now former editor had apologized, because they aren’t racist, and they didn’t do anything wrong and “they will not be silenced.”

Oh, lighten up, Jackie. No one’s burning down your office or stealing your printing press. They just said that they reserved their right to be offended by something offensive you said. Funny how that happens. And your editor quit because she made a joke whose blowback she couldn’t handle. You have every right to say offensive things. And we have every right not to like it. Funny how that works.

And as for the blog commentors who have said “Well, rappers say that all that time”:

- That doesn’t mean you have to.

- It’s ignorant no matter who says it, no matter what race they are. Or what gender. I have never even heard that phrase written that way, although those two unfortunate words are found all through hip-hop. And they’re ugly. No matter who says them. So stop. I don’t care if you’re a rapper, a rocker, a blogger or just someone who likes pushing people’s buttons. You say that, someone is likely to fight back. This is how it works.

- Stop hiding behind other people’s ignorance. I am not thin-skinned for being offended by something that anyone with sense might know was offensive.

So one more time. That’s a bad word. If you didn’t know that , it is. Don’t call anybody that, OK? You don’t have to ask anyone else. I don’t speak for black people, or women, or black women, or the easily offended, very often. But on this I feel confident about saying definitively. DON’T EVER SAY THAT TO ANYONE.

You’re welcome!

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Highlights of 2011 Jingle Ball include Pitbull, Flo Rida, Kelly Clarkson

By Patty Canedo   |  Live Shows, Pop  |  December 12, 2011

Kelly Clarkson performs at Y-100's Jingle Ball. (Howie Grapek / GPO)

For weeks Y100 exhaustively plugged Jingle Ball 2011, its ongoing list of performers and (practically no) show-stopping surprises. Finally, the event emerged on the Bank Atlantic Center stages to all the teens, tweens and moms whose job it was to act as chauffeur/balance post to girls jumping and hollering on chairs. The amped-up lineup was a who’s who of the station’s most (over) played.

Headlining the holiday extravaganza in his native barrio was Mr. 305, Pitbull. A noticeably exhausted and hoarse Mr. Worldwide still flailed, gyrated in usual Pitbull fashion to a waning crowd; most likely because it was past curfew. Pitbull took “Boom Baby Baby” into a “Are You Gonna Go My Way” rif with a little “I Just Came To Say Hello” sample to get the crowd pumped. As ever, Pitbull commandeered the stage with his dynamic presence and excellent horn- and percussion-rich band but performed a string of hits that showcase him as a “featuring…” artist. At 40 hip-swerving minutes, the longest set of the night enlisted the aid of friends Mark Anthony and Chris Brown lending vocals from a projection screen for “Rain Over Me” and “International Love”.

Pitbull briefly appropriated his own set with “Mentirosa” and “Bon, Bon”, hits that would typically crush this area code, but to accommodate the evening’s Top 40 theme were squeezed between “International Love” and “I Know You Want Me”. Speaking of people he’s collaborated with, Cuban singer and Miami resident Nayer accompanied a sweat-laced, raspy voiced Pitbull to close the show with a shattering “Give Me Everything”.
Mr. 305 followed David Guetta, who was encompassed by a stage wide DJ booth. From behind the prodigious turntable Guetta transcended the concert venue to his native club surroundings. In an abrupt 30-minute set, Guetta led the crowd through club and radio hits including “Where Dem Girls At” with special guest, Flo Rida, and pre-recorded Nicki Minaj vocals.

Photos: Y-100 Jingle Ball | Visit this writer’s website

The highly-amped Flo Rida addition to the Jingle Ball line-up was culminated when Elvis Duran beckoned Flo Rida to finish business. As a late addition, there was no time to hoist Flo Rida and dangle him above the crowd so he performed “Good Feeling” on the shoulders of a security guard on the floor to be somewhat among the crowd. The rapper enlisted personnel’s help to hold him up as he climbed the barrier between the stage and floor reeving up the audience for an awaiting Pitbull.
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Janet Jackson pays tribute to brother, city at Miami’s Fillmore

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Concert Reviews, Dance, Live Shows, Music, Music Feature, Pop, R&B  |  December 06, 2011

Janet Jackson performs at the Fillmore Miami Beach. (Howie Grapek / GPO)

The concert: Janet Jackson’s “The No. 1″‘s

Where and when: Miami Beach’s Fillmore, Monday Dec. 5

What happened: There were times during Janet Jackson’s energetic, nostalgic, slow-jamming, booty-shaking cap to her current North American tour where you looked at the young dancers accompanying the singer on involved routines for songs like “Rhythm Nation” and “Together Again” and think:

• Wow! Janet Jackson at 45 moves like she’s 20 years younger! Go Janet!

• The majority of the dancers might not have been born when “What Have You Done For Me Lately” and “Nasty Boys” were released!

• Who knew that “Nasty Boys” would stand the test of time?

Photos: Janet Jackson at the Fillmore

Let’s get this out of the way — Janet is often accused of lip-synching, which a lot of singers who do a lot of dancing sometimes do. Janet has said that she is singing live on this tour, and for most of the show, that seemed evident, particularly in the ballad section. But it’s also clear that she was singing, at least early in the show and during the more kinetic numbers, over a backing track.
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Video: Inside Lady Gaga’s bizarre new video for ‘Marry the Night’

By E! Online   |  Celeb Stalker, Pop  |  December 02, 2011

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Weekend performance snapshot: Avery Sommers, Babyface, Craig Ferguson

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Concert Reviews, Jazz, Live Shows, Local music, Music, Music Feature, Pop, R&B, Stand-up Comedy  |  November 21, 2011

Leslie's weekend fun included shows by Avery Sommers, Babyface and Craig Ferguson.

The show: Avery Sommers at The Royal Room at the Colony Hotel, Palm Beach

When: Friday, although she’ll be there next weekend as well.

What happened: Broadway and stage star Sommers (“Ain’t Misbehavin’,” “Chicago”) is by now a frequent headliner at the Royal Room, which doesn’t mean that she’s just phoning in the same show all the time. She’s not — every song the gloriously big-voiced singer wraps her gifted pipes around is a passionate treat, whether she’s revisiting her stage career (a rollicking “Ain’t Misbehaving” and the saucy “When You’re Good To Mama” from Chicago), getting patriotic (a lovely version of Lee Greenwood’s “God Bless The U.S.A.”) or getting her disco on with the buoyant fun of “I Will Survive.”

Part of the trick of a good cabaret singer is to mix well-chosen songs with a confident, comfortable rapport with the audience. And Sommers is, as always, the very definition. She tells a fun story, and comes down into the crowd a few times to get up close and personal. She looks like she’s having fun, and that helps the audience to as well.
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The E.N.D. as we know it: Miami show to be the last — for now — for Black Eyed Peas

By Jonathan Tully   |  Live Shows, Pop  |  November 17, 2011

It’s been rumored, denied and speculated upon for a while now.

But now it’s official: The Nov. 23 show at Sun Life Stadium in Miami Gardens will be the Black Eyed Peas’ final show – at least for now — according to representatives of the group. The Peas were unavailable for comment – they are currently in Paraguay, finishing the South American leg of the tour.

David Saltz, who is executive producer of the Nov. 23 show and serves as the executive producer for Miami Dolphins Entertainment, said the band is going on a hiatus, with each individual member pursuing their own projects.

“I don’t know if anyone has a crystal ball and the answer to this about the group,” Saltz said in a telephone interview. “But they’ve agreed to have a hiatus.”

Directions, invite a friend, nearby dining

The show already had a great deal of buzz behind it, with guest performances by the likes of Cee Lo Green, Jason Derulo, T-Pain, Jordon Hollywood, Sean Kingston and DJ Smiley.
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Hanson proves to be more pleasure than guilty

By Leslie Gray Streeter   |  Live Shows, Music, Pop, R&B, Rock  |  October 26, 2011
 
On last season’s “Dancing With The Stars,” the brothers Hanson – Taylor, Zac and Isaac- appeared on the ABC celebrity dance competition’s “Guilty Pleasures” week, featuring their inescapably catchy hit “MmmBop:”. No band exactly cherishes the idea that anyone would have to feel guilty in order to justify liking their music, but during the show, lead singer Taylor had a thought.
 
“We were performing songs by people like Lionel Richie, and we were kinda like ‘Hey, does ‘guilty pleasure’ mean ‘really, really successful?’” says Taylor, once a ruddy-cheeked page boy-wearing 14-year-old, now a 28-year-old married dad. “We were like ‘We’ll take it!’”

Hanson hits the Culture Room Friday with their new album “Shout It Out,” but when their first studio album, “Middle of Nowhere” hit in 1997, critics seemed not to know what to make of them. They were three cherub-faced blond brothers whose music was informed more by early soul-inflected rock than by the Disney alums and boy bands sharing those charts with them. Well, they were literally boys in a band, who wrote and played their own music. But they weren’t edgy, sexy or cool, and their age, as well as their wholesomeness, made them easy to dismiss.
 
Nevertheless, they hit the media circuit hard, and their interviews were fun, fast, ocassionally frustrating (it was hard to tell who was talking sometimes!) and surprisingly professional – in full disclosure, I interviewed them by phone twice, and remember a lot of passing of the phone back and forth.
 
Taylor, who I remember as incredibly serious and polite for such a young and newly famous, says now that he remembers being “excited to be doing what we were doing, as we are now. But there were times when the idea of the media and a public persona felt a little bizarre, to keep that up. We understood it was a lot to navigate, but it was part of being in the public eye. Unfortunately, what you say and communicate very often does not come through when the stories are written. You just can’t take it personally.”
 
Indeed. But that’s a lesson anyone even remotely famous must learn eventually, and one “definitely important to learn early,” he says. “The sooner you learn that, the sooner you stop making every single mistake. We got an exceptionally early start in our career – next year we’ll have been in a band for 20 years – and having that experience and the ability to pull from that is great. We’ve kind of had two or three shots at it, a couple of extra swings.”
 
Their latest album again mines the vibe of the past – I always thought Taylor in particularly was a Midwestern Little Stevie Winwood. Taylor says that they’ve always been “about classic rock and roll, which was really the thing that inspired us and initially brought us into music – Chuck Berry, Aretha Franklin, Bobby Darren, Sam and Dave. You grow in your influences – there were a lot of great 70s bands, and we grew up in the ’90s, so the last couple of albums were a little more pop rock, with more guitar.”

And in the spirit of some of those classic recordings, much of “Shout It Out” was done in one room, old school, “done in pre-production, where we sorted out the arrangement of the songs,” Taylor says.

In the days since “MmmBop,” the band members did their own things, got married and had kids, and even did some musical exploration outside of Hanson. While Taylor says “there’s a place for taking a pause, we can’t imagine not making records. Once you’ve experienced this sort of lifestyle, and being able to create something, speaking to a massive audience, or even a medium audience, it’s an addictive game. It’s for the adrenaline junkie. We get to create something, to share it and walk on stage to try and convert people each night. It’s great to see them get converted and sing your songs back to you. The idea of it being a phase was never something that was a factor for any of us.”

And that’s nothing to be guilty of. 

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Pop picks for 2011-12: Two major hip-hop shows highlight the season

By Larry Aydlette   |  Live Shows, Pop  |  October 13, 2011

2011-12 season preview: Art | Theater | Dance

Jay-Z and Kanye West bring their Watch The Throne Tour to South Florida for two shows: Nov. 14 in Sunrise and Nov. 15 in Miami. (Kevin Winter / Getty Images)

SEASON UPSIDE: The Kravis Center really ups its game in the stand-up area, with appearances by Wanda Sykes, Dennis Miller, Martin Short and one-time local boy Larry the Cable Guy.

SEASON DOWNSIDE: If you’re not a hip-hop fan, the big must-see concert is nowhere to be seen.

JOHN OATES
Oct. 26, Bamboo Room, Lake Worth

The greatest ’stache in pop-soul history brings his solo side (no Hall, just Oates) to this intimate venue. It’s rare to see a big star in a neighborhood joint.

MY MORNING JACKET
Dec. 10, Sunset Cove Amphitheatre, Boca Raton

One of the most acclaimed indie rock bands of the past decade in a small amphitheater show? And you haven’t gotten your tickets yet?

JAY-Z AND KANYE WEST
Nov. 14, BankAtlantic Center, Sunrise; Nov. 15, American Airlines Arena, Miami
BLACK-EYED PEAS
Nov. 23, Sun Life Stadium, Miami Gardens

The monster shows of the fall season. Jay-Z and Kanye are the double bill every hip-hop fan has been waiting for, while Fergie and Will.I.Am put on the kind of visual spectacle that only football stadiums can handle.
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Video: Gavin DeGraw sings ‘Not Over You’ on NBC’s ‘Today’ one month after assault

By pbpulse.com Staff   |  Live Shows, Pop, TV  |  September 15, 2011

Visit msnbc.com for breaking news, world news, and news about the economy

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