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Tag: Joni Mitchell

  • This Day in Rock History: January 17

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    Lots of interesting things happened in rock history on Jan. 17. It’s when an iconic hair metal band was formed, and many legendary names made their way into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame. This is what happened on this day in rock history.

    Cultural Milestones

    Jan. 17 is the anniversary of many pivotal moments in rock culture. Some of the most significant are:

    • 1981: Mötley Crüe was formed in Los Angeles, California, when drummer Tommy Lee and bassist Nikki Sixx teamed up, with vocalist Vince Neil and guitarist Mick Mars joining shortly after. The band released its debut album, Too Fast for Love, that same year and has sold over 100 million records worldwide since.
    • 1996: The Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony took place at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City. Many legendary bands and performers were inducted, including Pink Floyd, David Bowie, Jefferson Airplane, and The Velvet Underground.
    • 2001: Long-time Metallica bassist Jason Newsted announced publicly that he was leaving the band, citing personal reasons and burnout after many years of recording and touring. Robert Trujillo joined two years later and is still with the band.

    Notable Recordings and Performances

    Stories are great, but at the end of the day, it’s all about the music. These are the most noteworthy performances and album releases from Jan. 17:

    • 1974: Rock & Roll Hall of Fame inductee Joni Mitchell released her sixth studio album, Court and Spark, via Asylum Records. It’s her most successful album to date, achieving double-Platinum status in the U.S. and reaching the top spot on the Canadian album chart.
    • 1978: Scottish band Simple Minds made its live debut with a show at Satellite City in Glasgow, Scotland. The group has sold more than 60 million album copies worldwide since, with the help of huge hits such as “Don’t You (Forget About Me),” “Waterfront,” and “Alive and Kicking.”

    These are the rock-related highlights from Jan. 17. Visit us again tomorrow to find out which events stand out from that day in rock history.

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    Dan Teodorescu

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  • Houston Concert Watch 12/26: George Clinton, Erykah Badu and More – Houston Press

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    Thanksgiving 1976 was one for the ages in San Francisco.  The 5,000 people lucky enough to score tickets for The Band’s “Last Waltz” concert attended maybe the best rock and roll party ever.

    A full Thanksgiving dinner was served to kick things off, followed by ballroom dancing and readings from Beat poets like Lawrence Ferlinghetti and Michael McClure.  Then came the concert itself, which began with a 12-song set from The Band.  Then it was time for (musical) dessert, as Bob Dylan, Neil Young, Jone Mitchell, Van Morrison, Muddy Waters and others joined The Band to celebrate their shared musical heritage.  In all, over four hours of incredible and historic music making.

    Firing up the Martin Scorsese film which documented the event as part of your Thanksgiving celebration is a fine idea.  The Last Waltz looks great, and the audio is excellent considering the era.  However, don’t be sucked in by the myth that is created by Scorsese and Band guitarist Robbie Robertson.  Each man wanted out of the collaboration.  As a mega music fan Scorsese wanted a path into the world of rock and roll.  Robertson, on the other hand, was looking to get into the movie business. 

    All well and good, but Robertson had unilaterally made the decision to terminate The Band’s performing career, and the other members of the group – particularly drummer / vocalist Levon Helm) were not happy about it.  This accounts for their collective glum demeanor during most of the film’s interview segments, and it also explains Robertson’s desire to cast (with Scorsese’s help) The Band as musicians who had given their all for their art and were simply too depleted – physically and emotionally – to continue any longer.

    In point of fact, The Band had not toured all that much during its existence, certainly not in comparison to bluesmen like Muddy Waters.  Sure, business travel of any kind is taxing and not all the fun that it’s cracked up to be, but don’t buy dramatic (and probably pre-scripted) Robertson quotes like, “16 years on the road. The numbers start to scare you.  I mean, I couldn’t live with 20 years on the road. I don’t think I could even discuss it.”

    As a footnote, check out Scorsese during the interview segments.  Remind you of anybody?  If you said, “Marty DiBergi from Spinal Tap!” go to the head of the class.  But – to quote the esteemed Mr. DiBergi – enough of my yakkin’. Whaddaya say? Let’s boogie!

    Ticket Alert

    San Angelo’s purveyors of Texican rock and roll, Los Lonely Boys, kind of wandered in the desert (maybe literally, considering their location) for several years after hitting it big with the single “Heaven.”  After taking a lengthy break, the Garza brothers checked the balance in their bank accounts, got back together and released a new album (Resurrection) last year.  Tickets are on sale now for their concert at the House of Blues on Saturday, February 14. 

    Also performing on Valentine’s Day is Houston’s own Kat Edmonson, whose “Only the Bare Essentials” tour promises intimate evenings in which “[s]ubtlety and nuance will be served up as main courses for this show, and the music, so delicately played, will leave you feeling entirely full.”  Wow, that’s a lot to swallow!  You can get tickets now for Edmonson’s show on Saturday, February 14, at the Heights Theater.

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    Wolfmother will play at the House of Blues on Monday, June 8, marking the 20th anniversary of the band’s debut album, and tickets are on sale now.  Though the band has been hounded (sorry) by accusation of classic rock appropriation, that’s a bit off the mark.  Sure, you can tell that these guys listened to a lot of Led Zeppelin and Black Sabbath growing up, but is that such a bad thing?

    After working behind the scenes in the music business as a songwriter and producer for several years, Meghan Trainor’s solo career took off with 2014’s “All About That Bass,” a song that flipped the gender of Sir Mix-a-Lot’s “Baby Got Back” and threw in some body-positivity messages for good measure.  Trainor’s “Get in Girl” tour will stop at Toyota Center on Tuesday, July 28, and tickets are on sale now.

    Much like the Beach Boys and Jimmy Buffett before him, Jack Johnson has made a career by creating a surf-and-sand vibe that is easy to listen to and not terribly demanding.  But hey, he comes by it honestly, having been raised in Hawaii and making a name for himself as a professional surfer during his teenage years.   Johnson will perform on Friday, August 28, at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion, so get yourself a pocketful of edibles and get ready.

    Concerts This Week

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    While the following week will be occupied with Thanksgiving-related activities, there are a few options available if you and your cool cousins want to get out of the house for a bit.  On Friday, OG funkster George Clinton will perform at the House of Blues along with Parliament-Funkadelic. George is 84 years old, so you might want to catch his act while you can.  But, as “Flashlight” says, “most of all, most of all” this show represents the opportunity to experience some 100 proof funk as dispensed by the master.

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    The always unpredictable and irrepressible Erykah Badu will play two nights, Friday and Saturday, this week at the 713 Music Hall.  Badu’s “Return of Automatic Slim” tour marks the 25th anniversary of her album Mama’s Gun, and indications are that “reimaginings” of some of the disc’s tracks will be on the set list.  Hope she doesn’t stray too far from the original arrangements – they were classics.

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    Think you might need some honky-tonk after all that turkey and dressing?  Then Shoeshine Charley’s Big Top Lounge is your spot on Friday, when Dale Watson and His Lonestars will be tending the flame of traditional country music.  How rootsy is Watson?  He opened a recording studio in Memphis with the original board from Sun Studio, where Elvis, Johnny Cash and Jerry Lewis produced all of their early hits.  Now that’s hardcore.

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    Tom Richards

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  • Joni Mitchell Thrills Fans With Deep Cuts (and Cuts Trump Down to Size) at Hollywood Bowl in First Full L.A. Show in 24 Years: Concert Review

    Joni Mitchell Thrills Fans With Deep Cuts (and Cuts Trump Down to Size) at Hollywood Bowl in First Full L.A. Show in 24 Years: Concert Review

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    At Joni Mitchell’s Hollywood Bowl show Saturday night, the revered singer-songwriter offered the rapt audience a first-ever live performance of…

    Wait, let’s just take a time-out right there and let those words sink in. At Joni Mitchell’s Hollywood Bowl show. What were the odds? Right?… Sorry, we now return to our regularly scheduled review.

    At Joni Mitchell’s Hollywood Bowl show Saturday night, the revered singer-songwriter offered the rapt audience a first-ever live performance of “The Sire of Sorrow (Job’s Sad Song),” a deep cut from 30 years ago that borrows themes from the biblical book of Job to ask God, the “tireless watcher,” “Tell me, why do you starve the faithful? Why do you crucify the saints? And you let the wicked prosper.” In an election year, the choice felt almost as much political as theological.

    Following that somber, musically sophisticated number, Brandi Carlile — the unofficial emcee and enabler of the evening — made note of the song’s dark scriptural origins, then announced that the setlist was about to take a left turn. “She was worried it would make you feel sad,” Carlile said, “so she asked us to follow it up with this next one.”

    Up next in the show’s divine playlist: “God Must Be a Boogie Man.” This was not one of the night’s handful of live premieres, but it did mark the first time that Mitchell was performing the delightful track from her 1979 “Mingus” album since 1983.

    They say there are no atheists in foxholes, and there might not have been any in the dell tucked into the Hollywood hills that houses the Bowl, either, on Saturday night, with Mitchell returning from the nearly-dead to deliver her biggest and fullest set since she suffered an aneurysm in 2015… or, really, since she did her last tour 24 years ago, which had her last headlining in L.A. at the Greek in 2000. With all due respect to Job’s torment, it felt for a night, at least, like some Boogie Man up there must like us.

    There are few shows that audiences walk into with as little certainty about what they’re going to get as this Bowl crowd did. (The two-night stand continues with a second show Sunday evening.) Since her health crisis, Mitchell has made her way back to the stage in very gradual steps. At MusiCares’ salute to her in Las Vegas in early 2022, she mostly watched from the side of the stage and just chimed in with a couple of lines near the end — so fans were shocked when, in July of that year, she made a surprise appearance at the Newport Folk Festival in a Carlile-led “Joni Jam” that had her singing lead, or sharing it, on a fair amount of numbers, while others were fronted by all-star guests. That mixed format was reprised for another show in the midst of a Carlile weekend at the Gorge in Washington state in June 2023, followed a mini-Joni Jam that served as the three-song encore to a Brandi Carlile and Friends show here at the Bowl in October of last year. Clearly, she was back, as a capable performer, in the two extended shows she’s performed in the last 27 months … but still, no one buying a ticket for this weekend’s shows really knew if they’d be getting another jam-style show or maybe, just maybe, a truly full-on Mitchell performance.

    The answer was: both. Production-wise, the setting was much the same as the previous two Joni Jam shows, with a big cast of musicians and singers seated on chairs and couches around the legend’s throne. And there were two moments in which other stars did step forward to take foreground vocal turns, effectively serenading Mitchell — Annie Lennox on “Ladies of the Canyon,” and Marcus Mumford on “California.”

    But if you came to hear Joni Mitchell sing her heart out, at length and in full, without really ceding the stage for more than those two cameos, that is what you got Saturday night at the Bowl, for the first time in nearly a quarter-century. It was one more incremental step on her path back to public performance, but it also felt like one giant leap for Mitchell-kind — a seemingly impossible moment in which the singer was commanding the stage for about three hours (not counting intermission) and delivering just what you might have hoped for from her at any point in her long career.

    She clearly had a lot of help in getting here, and thanked Carlile once again for coaxing her out of retirement as she worked on regaining her strength. But was it Mitchell in the driver’s seat? I can only say that as I watched her sit on her throne and bop her trademark wolf’s-head walking stick around to the rhythm for three hours, as I tried to figure out what it reminded me of, it finally came to me: She looked like someone having a magnificent time manipulating a stick-shift.

    Mitchell’s enjoyment was evident to the full house even before anyone caught sight of her. The Bowl’s revolving stage had to turn around to reveal the cast of players already seated in place, but as it did, the sound of the star’s laughter reverberated through the Bowl, as if she were getting a big chuckle out of riding the world’s slowest roller coaster. She continued in that mood of merriment all night — sometimes at something Carlile said or did, occasionally at her own lyrics, but mostly, seemingly, just out of the sense that maybe it’s as absurdly funny as it is wonderful to be alive and being celebrated after all that has transpired. Mitchell got a big chortle out of changing the lyrics to “Night Ride Home,” from “I love the man beside me” to “I’m pissed off at the man beside me.” In a year when women’s mirth has become an actual campaign issue, it’s fair to say that anyone who objects to the sound of Kamala Harris laughing would have been really offended by Joni Mitchell’s performance.  

    Speaking of the election… The legend was not shy about making her feelings known. (Feelings which should have come as a surprise to exactly no one on hand.) Singing the topically minded “Dog Eat Dog” deep into the second set — giving it a live airing for the first time since 1985, the year the album of that same name came out — she followed the lyrics’ reference to “snakebite evangelists and racketeers and big wig financiers” with an addendum: “…like Donald Trump.” After the song wrapped up, she noted: “I wish I could vote. I’m a Canadian. I’m one of those lousy immigrants.” In case anyone doubted where she stood, she finally blurted it out: “Fuck Donald Trump.” This resulted in a standing ovation.

    The generous 27-song evening was divided into halves, each of which had its own personality, and a partially different set of musicians. The first set was the one that had truly hardcore Mitchell heads dropping their jaws with thoroughly unpredictable song choices. The second was the more overtly crowd-pleasing set… and not in any derogatory sense, because it’s not as if the super-fans ecstatic over the obscurities that dominated the first half suddenly started balking when they heard “Big Yellow Taxi” and “A Case of You” in the second.

    That first half had a slightly more intimate set of players, though it was still a significant ensemble by most standards, with the vocal duo Lucius providing choral vocals from the nearest couch, SistaStrings chipping in to augment the choir as well as provide string arrangements from a slightly further perch, and longtime Mitchell favorite Mark Isham adding grace notes on trumpet and soprano sax. The Hanseroth Twins played guitar and bass, Blake Mills and Robin Pecknold shared still more guitar duties, Jacob Collier held down the initial keyboard work, and Abe Rounds was on drums. For Part 2, additional guests came in that turned it into more of the Joni Jam seen in Newport and the Gorge, with Marcus Mumford adding percussion, Celisse and Dawes’ Taylor Goldsmith on guitar and vocals, Allison Russell on vocals… and a couple newcomers to the public Joni Jams, Jon Batiste and Rita Wilson, joining the batallion on keys and backing vocals, respectively.

    Aside from a couple of moments in the first 15 minutes when Mitchell sounded like she was still finding her voice, she sang full-throatedly and, for what her range is now, spectacularly. There are moments in a show this career-encompassing where the vocal ensemble is going to have to carry some weight in moments of a song that was written for Mitchell’s higher, ingenue voice, like “Raised on Robbery.” In a few cases, Carlile floated in and out with a higher part that complemented the lowered range Joni was singing in, as if Mitchell’s older and younger voices were doing a delightful duet with one another.

    But what was remarkable — and maybe a little bit surprising even if you’d been fortunate to catch one of the rare previous Joni Jams — was how reliant this performance was on Mitchell’s solo voice, for however much expert support she got from the cast. The songs taken from parts of her career when she’d already developed a more mature voice, in the ‘80s and ‘90s, work especially wonderfully now that she has found her way back into performance. Hearing her sing her way through all eight minutes of “Come in From the Cold” now could or should count as the highlight of anyone’s concertgoing year — with or without the angelic, interstitial curlicues added by Carlile that take the number to an even more transcendent level.

    What Carlile adds musically as a background vocalist — or featured descant singer, really — can’t be undervalued. And right up there alongside “Come in From the Cold” as a highlight was the penultimate “Shine,” a latter-day Mitchell song that is Carlile’s personal favorite out of an overwhelming catalog, with good reason. It’s an epic protest song and an epic gospel song, all at once — deeply cynical about the world, from its politicians to its petty traffic offenders (which always gets a laugh) — but Joni sounds like she actually means it when she asks the light to shine on the unjust as well as the just. And what an amazing gift it is that the world (or a small, select part of it) gets to hear a song that great, and that undervalued, revived in 2024. Following “Shine,” the closing group-sing of “Circle Game” almost felt anticlimactic… aside from the fact that it’s, like, one of the most moving songs ever written.

    Just as much as with the complementary vocal parts, Carlile also serves an invaluable role in these Joni Jams in the part she was really born to play: Mitchell’s hype man. She generally refrains from laying it on too thick, but sometimes she just can’t help herself. “I don’t want to freak anybody out,” Carlile blurted out right after the third song wrapped up, “but YOU JUST LISTENED TO JONI MITCHELL SING ‘HEJIRA’!” Back-announcing doesn’t get any better, or more bluntly appropriate, than that.

    Joni Mitchell & the Joni Jam setlist, the Hollywood Bowl, Oct. 19, 2024:

    Set 1
    Be Cool
    Harlem in Havana (live premiere)
    Hejira
    Cherokee Louise
    Coyote
    Carey
    The Sire of Sorrow (Job’s Sad Song) (live premiere)
    God Must Be a Boogie Man
    Sunny Sunday
    If I Had a Heart (live premiere)
    Refuge of the Roads
    Night Ride Home
    Both Sides Now

    Set 2
    Big Yellow Taxi
    Raised on Robbery
    California (sung by Marcus Mumford)
    The Magdalene Laundries
    Ladies of the Canyon (sung by Annie Lennox)
    Summertime (Gershwin cover)
    Come in From the Cold
    A Case of You
    I’m Still Standing (Elton John cover with rewritten lyrics)
    Dog Eat Dog
    Amelia
    If
    Shine
    The Circle Game

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    Chris Willman

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  • Joni Mitchell’s music back on Spotify 2 years after boycotting platform  | Globalnews.ca

    Joni Mitchell’s music back on Spotify 2 years after boycotting platform | Globalnews.ca

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    Joni Mitchell’s music is back on Spotify more than two years after the songwriter pulled it off the platform in protest of other content available on the popular streaming service.

    Mitchell herself did not release an official statement announcing the return to Spotify, but a search for her content on the app reveals her complete discography is available to play again.

    Mitchell pulled her music from Spotify in January 2022 in solidarity with fellow Canadian music icon, raised in Winnipeg, Neil Young, who removed his catalog to protest the company’s decision to give controversial podcast host Joe Rogan an exclusive platform.


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    Young had given Spotify an ultimatum over concerns Rogan was spreading COVID-19 vaccine misinformation on his show.

    Young announced earlier this month he was coming back to Spotify, saying on his website that the same “disinformation podcast” is now featured on various streaming platforms and he can’t leave them all.

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    Rogan signed a new deal with Spotify in February, which the Wall Street Journal estimated was worth as much as US$250 million over several years.

    This report by The Canadian Press was first published on March 23, 2024.

    — with files from The Associated Press


    Click to play video: 'Taking a look at the musical history of Manitoba'


    Taking a look at the musical history of Manitoba


    &copy 2024 The Canadian Press

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  • Neil Young Has Returned To Spotify, Conveniently

    Neil Young Has Returned To Spotify, Conveniently

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    Neil Young, formerly part of iconic folk rock supergroup Crosby, Stills, Nash, & Young, is hailed as one of music’s greatest. He’s blended folk rock with country in innovative ways for decades, his music the blueprint of budding artists today. Loved by millions, Neil Young’s music could be found on streaming platforms everywhere…until 2022.


    When Joe Rogan’s podcast, The Joe Rogan Experience, spread misinformation about the COVID-19 vaccination, artists like Joni Mitchell and Neil Young called for the removal of their music from Spotify. In a short-lived movement, these artists hoped to make a statement. To “stick it to the man”, if you will.

    Many of the artists who pulled their music from the platform have since returned. Because, at the end of the day, Spotify is the #1 streaming platform in the world. With the most users and traction, thousands of artists thrive on the app. Artists like Neil Young became popular at times where revolutionizing through music was the edgy, popular thing to do…however, Spotify is a misdirected target in this situation. Be mad at Joe Rogan for saying it.

    And recently, Neil Young announced he is returning to “low res” Spotify via his website, Neil Young Archives. He states,

    “Spotify, the #1 streamer of low res music in the world – Spotify where you get less quality than we made, will now be home of my music again. My decision comes as music services Apple and Amazon have started serving the same disinformation podcast features I had opposed at SPOTIFY. I cannot just leave Apple and Amazon, like I did Spotify, because my music would have very little streaming outlet to music lovers at all, so I have returned to Spotify, in sincere hopes that Spotify sound quality will improve”

    As the #1 streaming platform in music, that means you lose a lot of streams from removing your discography from the app. Coincidentally, Neil Young is releasing an album with Crazy Horse on April 20, 2024 called F##IN’ UP — a perfect time to return to the app if you ask me.

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    Jai Phillips

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  • Grammy Nominated Folk Duo The Milk Carton Kids Celebrate Leap Day at Last Concert Café

    Grammy Nominated Folk Duo The Milk Carton Kids Celebrate Leap Day at Last Concert Café

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    This February, we all get an extra 24 hours to enjoy – and for folk fans, your stars might be aligning this Leap Day as the Grammy-nominated folk duo from California known at The Milk Carton Kids will be playing the night away at Last Concert Café.

    “Never played there,” says singer-songwriter Joey Ryan, one half of the duo alongside Kenneth Pattengale. But we’ve been coming to Houston since the beginning, at the Mucky Duck. Always one of our favorite stops.”

    The notion of playing the Last Concert Café comes with a drip of irony, Ryan reveals. “I didn’t realize that. It might be our last concert, it’s the last one of the tour. But I hope it’s not our last concert.”

    If the end for the fan favorite folkies was indeed nigh, Pattengale and Ryan have plenty to be proud of culminating in their 2023 release I Only See The Moon, which has been well received by audiences and their peers in the music industry. The album was nominated for the 2023 Grammy Award for Best Folk Album, though it did lose the award to Joni Mitchell’s At Newport (Live).

    Looking back on his decade plus working with Pattengale, he’s amused by the kismet of their first encounters. “Been 14 years,’ Ryan states. “We were both unsuccessfully pursuing solo careers here in LA in the late ‘aughts. We met at the Hotel Café where Kenneth had a show – that was a great place for the singer/songwriter scene. The owner of the club Marco told me I had to come down and see this new guy, Kenneth Pattengale. So we kind of hit it off right away and with in a few days, he had invited me over to his studio/house to sing together. It was one of those moments that people talk about, but the first song we sung together we went: ‘Oh well, I guess our lives are going to be different now.’”

    Together, they’ve released 7 full albums and had music appear on popular shows like Tina Fey’s Girls5Eva and the Martin Scorsese produced HBO drama Vinyl. In fact, the duo’s first two albums Prologue and Retrospect remain free on their group’s official website.

    Despite their solid footing as a duo, even Ryan concedes that going through the pandemic without his musical wingman was daunting at first. “But in the end, all of the effects have incredibly positive,” Ryan said. “The first year was very difficult, just calibrating what life is without performing all the time, because that’s all we had known for the previous decade was being on the road and performing every night. We knew we wanted to keep our community together and to be honest, we were mostly thinking of the artists.

    “We launched a web series called Sad Songs Quarantine Hour, which is an online version of the variety show we do here in LA at Largo nowadays called Sad Songs Comedy Hour. That was like remote collaboration and harmony singing with our friends and other artists around the country.

    “But what that shed light on for us accidently was that we became more in contact with the fans of our music, folk music. We realized that they were having as hard a time with the absence of live music and we were. It really has changed the way we look at touring and performing. Which not to be trite or self important, but feels more like a service – which sounds trite and self-important.

    “But it feels like we’re a part of a community that we hadn’t really realized before. That doesn’t just include the artist, but also fans of this left of center off the beaten path music. It’s a lot of really cool people: empaths, weirdos, storytellers, other artists. It is our people, and ironically, being separated from them for all that time made us realize how important it was for us all to be together.”

    It was revelations like these that really helped propel Ryan to co-founding the Los Angeles Folk Festival, which lit up LA for the first time with over a dozen musical acts this past October. “I think that sense of community was strong in our mind around festivals generally,” he says. “We had had the idea for the festival before the pandemic, but I think ethos around it and the purpose and the guiding principles behind it once we finally got to producing it after the pandemic was guided by this feeling that it’s not just about community among folk artists, but internationally, amongst both creators and appreciators of this music. The first year, by our metrics, was a huge success. It felt like a very special night of collaborations and joy. So we are planning year two.”

    The art form of folk music stretches back over 100 years and has turned great singer-songwriters like Woody Guthrie and Pete Seeger into legends. But perhaps surprisingly, this genre of music might play even better outside its homeland. “Internationally, maybe ironically or because it feels so quintessentially American, the appreciation for folk music is even more enthusiastic in our experience,” Ryan says. “The audiences go ape shit when we or other American artists like us show up. It makes it really fun to tour abroad. We joking refer to all our stuff as sad songs. Like we have song writing camp we call ‘Sad Songs Summer Camp.’

    “For me, I think, they’re not always sad. But there is a soul bearing and human-ness to the approach of the storytelling that evokes tears a lot. Like when Joni Mitchell performed at the Grammy’s just now after beating us in our Best Folk Album category — and no hard feelings, Joni. But also Tracy Chapman, when they performed everybody cried. When Dua Lipa performed, everybody danced. So folk music makes you cry, and we jokingly call it sad music but I don’t think it’s sad. I actually think it’s actually the happiest and most inherently hopeful form of song writing. So when you take pain or tribulation and turn it into art, like what could be more inherently hopeful act than that? There is a catharsis behind the sadness of folk music, and they’ve always needed that. And maybe right now, I think they might need it especially.”

    Ryan and Pattengale still have many years of music ahead of them, but even in their brief two decades of playing professionally, Ryan estimates they’ve seen a radical transformation in American music as an art form and as a business.

    “In these 14 years together and more than 20 years if you count us working individually, the only constant has been change. So both of us started after the total collapse of the recorded music industry. Neither of us had ‘90s record deals and got used to having tons of money around and having fancy things. We know a lot of people that did and some of them can’t get past it, and some never did, and others have been very adept at putting that past behind them and adapting the new world.”

    “I feel a little grateful that we never were around for any of that, we started when there was nothing. Streaming and all of its flaws and inequities is a miracle compared to what we had in 2009. Literally there was zero, the recording music industry as an industry had collapsed by 85%. Now I think it is actually close to the levels that we saw before Napster. Now how that money gets divided up is not perfect, but just the fact that there is an industry again is a new thing and that continually changes. It feels like live music has always been the same. Again, we never had any financial support, again, just because there was never any money around. It wasn’t even an option, it wasn’t like some people had it and some people didn’t. There was nothing.”

    Ryan continues: “So we’ve always looked at touring as a direct relationship between us and whoever wants to come see the show. I feel like that has basically been unchanged. In a lot of ways, it feels like we’re doing exactly what we did 14 years ago – luckily in some bigger rooms. But the idea that we all sort of get together in a room for the time to hopefully transcend whatever the world outside is for two hours, that to me, feels kind of universal and innately human,” he concludes. “The core of that doesn’t change, hopefully.”

    The Milk Carton Kids perform on Thursday February 29 at 8 p.m. at Last Concert Cafe, 1403 Nance. For more information, visit lastconcert.com. $36-344.

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    Vic Shuttee

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  • Joni Mitchell Reminds Us She Can Emotionally Wreck Us With Just One Song

    Joni Mitchell Reminds Us She Can Emotionally Wreck Us With Just One Song

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    Joni Mitchell sitting on a chair with a microphone in front of her, singing at the Grammys

    Being a fan of Joni Mitchell means that you are incredibly in touch with your emotions. A.k.a you cry all the time. Her music has the power to move you and make you feel something you may have previously not known. It’s why her Grammys performance is worthy of note.

    The performance, which marked her first at the award ceremony, was a slower version of one of her classics: “Both Sides Now.” There is a line in the 2003 film Love Actually when Karen (Emma Thompson) tells her husband, Harry (Alan Rickman) about her love of Mitchell. She says “I love her. And true love lasts a lifetime. Joni Mitchell is the woman who taught your cold English wife how to feel.” That’s exactly how I feel about Mitchell and it’s never been truer than while I was watching her sing on the Grammys stage.

    I could tell you every song by Mitchell that will make you feel something but I think, collectively, we all know that “Both Sides Now” is an emotional rollercoaster of a song. Listening to a slowed-down version with Brandi Carlile sitting next to her is something I don’t think I will fully ever get over. And it is all completely rooted in my deep love for Mitchell and her music.

    I purposely waited until the very late hours of the next day to watch this performance because I knew I would get emotional. What I didn’t expect was to sit and sob on my couch, my cat coming to check on me because I was that much of a wreck. But it is a testament to Mitchell’s ability as a songwriter and the power that her music continues to have on us.

    Mitchell will destroy you but you’ll be happy about it.

    I grew up in the 90s and found Mitchell on my own. I would listen to the Both Sides Now album that was released in 2000 and it is how I discovered “A Case of You” and the emotional chokehold that the album Blue would eventually have on me. Whenever I am lost in my own mind and upset over something that is out of my control, I’ll turn to Joni’s music.

    I am far from alone in that. It is what made that Love Actually scene such an iconic moment. Emma Thompson’s experience in the movie may not have been relatable to young me but watching her cry as “Both Sides Now” played was. It’s just that song you turn to when you need to have an emotional release. All of this was made that much more emotionally damaging by knowing that Mitchell won her first Grammy award and that this was the first time she was taking the stage.

    Will I forever be changed by this performance? Probably! I want to live in that moment where the camera pans to Meryl Streep and Beyoncé and they are both crying. It’s the power that Mitchell’s music has always held for me and it felt cathartic to see so many others feeling those same emotions with me.

    (featured image: John Shearer/Getty Images for The Recording Academy)

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    Rachel Leishman

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  • The Resilience of Joni Mitchell and Celine Dion as Underlined by the 2024 Grammys

    The Resilience of Joni Mitchell and Celine Dion as Underlined by the 2024 Grammys

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    There was scarcely a dry eye in the house when Joni Mitchell took the stage at the Crypto.com Arena toward the middle of the Grammy Awards to sing “Both Sides Now.” Although written by Mitchell, Judy Collins recorded the song first and released it on her 1967 album, Wildflowers. Suffering a common dilemma among songwriters (save for Diane Warren) who allow their compositions to be sung by other people, Mitchell didn’t like Collins’ interpretation of the track and ended up recording it herself for 1969’s Clouds. Her sophomore album was quick to chart on the Billboard 200 (at its highest position, it went up to number thirty-one), with “Both Sides Now” becoming her signature song as much as “Like A Virgin” would become Madonna’s on her own sophomore album. It was for this reason that Mitchell chose to sing it to mark her first-ever performance at the Grammys in her fifty-six year career. That’s right, despite winning eleven Grammys (now twelve after Sunday), Mitchell had never previously taken the stage at the ceremony to remind people of why. 

    At age eighty, it seemed just as good a time as any to highlight to the audience watching the Grammys (whether in-person or at home) of how she is the progenitor of the confessional female singer-songwriter shtick (to use a somewhat jaded term). In other words, without Joni, there would be no Taylor, no Lana. And without them, there would be no Olivia, no Billie—and so the cycle continues. She was joined onstage for a rousing reminder of what she “hath wrought” by Brandi Carlile (as her number one fan, that was only natural), SistaStrings, Blake Mills, Lucius, Allison Russell and Jacob Collier, all of whom flanked her as she sat in a regal armchair at the center of the chandelier-bedecked stage while holding a cane. As the chair slowly turned around, one couldn’t help but flash to a similar moment at the Billboard Music Awards in 2016, when Madonna turned in a similar fashion in her own fancy chair with a cane to sing a tribute to Prince in the form of “Nothing Compares 2 U” (at the Grammy Awards this year, Annie Lennox would sing that as a means to pay homage to Sinead O’Connor,  even though Prince was not a fan of her cover—which sounds slightly familiar in terms of Mitchell not being a fan of Collins’ interpretation of her work…except Collins’ version was considered the first instead of vice versa).

    But Mitchell gets far more respect than Madonna, so no one would ever try to mock her for having a cane (something Madonna uses for style rather than function, at her own risk of more public mockery). Apparently, once you get legitimately old, people don’t try to give you as much shit for it (Joe Biden and other U.S. government officials being the exception to the rule). And with Mitchell being eighty, she’s more than earned her stripes, ergo her right not to be judged for how she looks. But then, unlike post-Madonna pop stars, Mitchell’s work was always about substance over style, whereas pop music doesn’t exist without the flourishes of spectacle. This extends not only to how women dress and look, but also what they incorporate into their performances. 

    Incidentally, the woman to bridge this gap between “thoughtful music” and spectacle before Madonna even broke onto the scene was Celine Dion, whose debut album, La voix du bon Dieu, came out in 1981. Her gradual veering toward becoming more pop than “choir girl” happened in 1983, with her first hit single, “D’amour et d’amitié.” By the time Dion transitioned to English-language music and, much later, her spectacle-laden Vegas residency, Madonna had already put up a decided partition between the categories of pop singer and “serious” singer (even though Like A Prayer allowed critics to see her as both). For years, Dion was most people’s answer to the latter, until Madonna finally started to be reconsidered for her vocal and songwriting talents with 1998’s Ray of Light. 1998 was also the year, as it happened, when VH1 Divas Live aired, a special honoring Aretha Franklin by flanking her with Gloria Estefan, Shania Twain, Mariah Carey and, that’s right, Celine Dion. The latter was shaded in Mariah’s 2020 autobiography (though not by name or as many times as Madonna) for not “understan[ing] the culture of the court, and tr[ying] to come for the Queen” during the closing performance. As if. Dion was simply putting back out the energy that Franklin was giving when no one else would, not even Mariah. So hopefully the two didn’t run into each other backstage at Crypto.com Arena, because the last thing Dion needs after being diagnosed with a highly rare neurological disorder called stiff-person syndrome and being totally ignored and disregarded by Taylor Swift onstage is Mariah’s kind of self-superior energy. Which was only fed into all the more when Miley Cyrus accepted the first award for the night and graciously bowed down to her (figuratively, not literally) in a way that Swift probably should have with Dion. 

    But clearly, she was too caught up in the moment. Not just of making Grammy history by winning Album of the Year four times—the only musician ever to do so—but also of paying more respect to Lana Del Rey than Celine. Who proved her resilience yet again not just by showing up in her current health condition to dole out this honor, but by taking Swift’s comportment with a grain of salt. Though surely Swift couldn’t have acted that way if Mitchell had presented her with the award, for she is thought to be among Swift’s biggest influences, blueprint-wise, in her later album years. The “confessional, no holds barred” songwriting tack and all that.

    Then again, there was a time when Mitchell wasn’t really of the mind that Swift was anything like her, saying back in 2014, when it was still rumored that Swift might play Mitchell in a biopic, “I squelched that. I said to the producer, ‘All you’ve got is a girl with high cheekbones.’” Not exactly high praise for Swift for anything beyond her looks (which remain the Aryan wet dream). Though Swift has perhaps taken the shade-throwing in songs even farther than Mitchell, who told Elton John during their 2022 interview together, “People thought that [my songwriting] was too intimate. It was almost like Dylan going electric—I think it upset the male singer-songwriters. They go, ‘Oh no, do we have to bare our souls like this stuff, you know. I think it made people nervous, you know. More nervous than…it took to this generation, they seem to be able to face those emotions more easily than my generation.”

    That it did and that they do. Though Dion, another emotional Canadian (must be something in the water there), has her fair share of soul-baring songs. The only “catch” is, she didn’t write most of them. And yet, like Whitney Houston, her emotional delivery could fool anyone into believing that she had lived these experiences. Which, perhaps she did in some way or another. For, like Beyoncé often being approached with material that “might work” for her specific personality, so, too, do icons in Dion’s echelon receive song submissions that are tailored to them. Written with them foremost in mind. Which is perhaps why Swift looked down her nose at Dion while onstage, instead focusing on a fellow singer-songwriter like Del Rey’s accomplishments. 

    Whatever the reason for Swift’s social faux pas, Dion’s presence in conjunction with Mitchell’s on this night of a thousand stars spoke to the unique ability that these women have to bounce back from even the greatest of falls. Both physical and emotional. And there’s no doubt that their love of and connection to music is part of what has kept them both enduring in a manner that is, alas, simply “expected” of women, whether they’re legendary sonic powerhouses or not. Thus, women’s resilience is often taken for granted. Sort of the way Madonna’s continued presence is on this Earth after her own near-death experience during the summer of 2023. And yet, one would never know it to see her on The Celebration Tour now. Mitchell, too, is planning to take the stage at the Hollywood Bowl in October for the Joni Jam. And, who knows, Dion might well find a way to tour again. If she can take the stage at the Grammys, then maybe at least one live performance isn’t far behind…

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    Genna Rivieccio

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  • 2024 Grammy Awards Recap

    2024 Grammy Awards Recap

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    The 66th annual Grammy Awards were last night at the Crypto.com Arena in the not-so-sunny Los Angeles, California. As storms raged outside the arena, I tuned in for close to five hours of red carpet coverage and the sparkling ceremony to watch music’s biggest night and make my own judgments.


    At some points agonizing, the Grammys truly take their time. Packing performance after performance, people going well over their speech time, and leaving the main awards for the very end can feel never-ending. However, this year’s Grammy Awards had everything: Taylor Swift announcing a brand new album, Tortured Poet’s Department, Miley Cyrus getting her first two Grammy’s and delivering iconic speeches and performances, nods to Barbie, a visit from Celine Dion and a few controversial decisions.

    I mean, even Jay-Z took a shot at the Recording Academy for not giving Beyonce any Album of the Year awards despite having the most nominations. Taylor Swift brought Lana Del Rey on stage while accepting Album of the Year for Midnights to recognize how many artists’ sounds Del Rey’s influenced despite never having won a nomination. The Academy gets it wrong, and often.

    Who Won At The 2024 Grammys?

    Here are some winners from a few of the main categories, including the top four awards…And may I add that some of my predictions were spot on?

    Record of the Year: “Flowers” by Miley Cyrus

    Album of the Year: Midnights by Taylor Swift

    Song of the Year: “What Was I Made For” by Billie Eilish and FINNEAS

    Best New Artist: Victoria Monet

    Producer of the Year: Jack Antonoff

    Best Pop Solo Performance: “Flowers” by Miley Cyrus

    Best Pop Duo Performance: “Ghost in the Machine” by SZA and Phoebe Bridgers

    Best Pop Vocal Album: Midnights by Taylor Swift

    Best Pop Dance Recording: “Padam Padam” by Kylie Minogue

    Best Rock Performance: “Not Strong Enough” by boygenius

    Best Country Album: Bell Bottom Country by Lainey Wilson

    Best R&B Song: “Snooze” by SZA

    Who Should’ve Won At The 2024 Grammys?

    The Grammy Awards are decided by the Academy- a group of voters within the music industry who I sometimes think forget to listen to the music of the nominees. It’s why Jay-Z spoke up while receiving the Dr. Dre Global Impact Award, it is quite shocking that Beyonce has never won Album of the Year.

    While everyone at the Grammy’s deserves their awards, multiple artists got onstage to say this is not what they make music for. Artists like Miley Cyrus said she felt this happy yesterday because she’s doing it for herself. Taylor Swift thanks her fans, and says she’s happiest when making songs and doing what she loves…but sometimes, the awards gods are fickle.

    Olivia Rodrigo’s “Vampire” went home empty-handed, which was another surprise. While GUTS may not be my favorite work of Rodrigo’s, “Vampire” was a chart-topping, viral song that I truly thought would win something. SZA’s SOS album was on top of the Billboard Hot 100 every week but failed to receive a mention in the top categories like Album of the Year.

    Lana Del Rey, who’s been nominated upwards of 10 times and wrote one of the best albums in the culmination of her already iconic discography with Did you know that there’s a tunnel under Ocean Boulevard? Received zero awards throughout the night. In a controversial move, Taylor Swift brought her up on stage so the world can recognize all Lana’s done.

    In the Best New Artist category, Ice Spice and Noah Kahan were betting favorites to win…but ultimately, it went to Victoria Monét.

    The Best Performances From The Grammys

    Miley Cyrus

    @mileycyrus♬ original sound – Miley Cyrus

    It’s been years since Cyrus has graced any sort of stage, and she didn’t disappoint. Every bit as honest, exciting, and a true rockstar as she’s ever been, Miley Cyrus is one-of-a-kind. From chiding the audience for not singing along to celebrating her first Grammy win during her performance of “Flowers”, you could tell that Miley just wanted to have fun.

    She even shared she was doing this performance so she could watch clips of it later…and also admitted to foregoing underwear. It was fun, carefree, and exactly how these award shows should be.

    Joni Mitchell

    You may wonder how someone with as illustrious a career as Joni Mitchell has never performed at the Grammy’s. Singing a song she wrote at 21 years old, over half a century later, “Both Sides Now” was both moving and refreshing. She’s won nine Grammy’s herself, nominated 18 times, and has inspired the sounds of our favorite artists.

    She took folk music and made it her own, and after having to re-learn how to talk (and sing) from a brain aneurysm, no one is more well-respected in the industry than Mitchell.

    Luke Combs + Tracy Chapman

    Luke Combs’ cover of Tracy Chapman’s “Fast Car” dominated the charts this year. One of the most highly covered songs in the world, and Luke Combs put his country spin on it to create a beautiful, acoustic version. It feels almost entirely his own, but his performance with OG Tracy Chapman shows that music is, indeed, art.

    The song itself is a timeless classic, with Luke Combs being one of the most talented country vocalists in the game right now and Tracy Chapman reminding us the deep roots of the song.

    Other Notable Grammy Moments

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    Jai Phillips

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  • Taylor Swift Wins Her 4th Album Of The Year, But The Grammys Belonged To Tracy Chapman And Joni Mitchell

    Taylor Swift Wins Her 4th Album Of The Year, But The Grammys Belonged To Tracy Chapman And Joni Mitchell

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    Taylor Swift set a record by winning her fourth Album Of The Year Grammy, and there were special moments from Tracy Chapman, Joni Mitchell, and Billy Joel.

    Joni Mitchell Had The Night’s Most Stirring Performance

    Can you believe that Joni Mitchell had never performed at the Grammy before 2024?
    It is true, and Mitchell delivered a stirring rendition of her classic Both Sides Now with Brandi Carlile:

    Tracy Chapman Gets A Standing Ovation

    Luke Combs has made his sincere love of Tracy Chapman’s Fast Car well known. His affection and sincerity toward the song are why his cover version works. The roof popped off of the arena though when the audience realized that Tracy Chapman was on stage.

    Video:

    Combs seemed to be having the time of his life performing with Chapman, and the best part was that was mouthing the words along with her as she sang,

    Chapman got a huge standing ovation at the end of the song.

    Billy Joel Returns With A New Song

    The Grammys felt like being transported back in time when Billy Joel was shown on stage playing his first new song in thirty years, Turn The Lights Back On.

    Here is a clip of Joel’s performance:

    Jay-Z Rips The Grammys A New One

    Jay-Z ripped the Grammy’s and defended Beyonce in a really cool way for the fact that she has won the most Grammy’s of anyone in history, but has never won Album Of The Year, which makes zero sense:

    In the year of the Swift, Taylor Swift winning Album Of The Year felt like a foregone conclusion. Swift didn’t take the stage and endorse Joe Biden. According to the right wing, she’s saving that for after the Chiefs win the Super Bowl next Sunday.

    The Grammys are usually one of the more enjoyable awards shows, and 2024 didn’t disappoint.

    A Special Message From PoliticusUSA

    If you are in a position to donate purely to help us keep the doors open on PoliticusUSA during what is a critical election year, please do so here. 

    We have been honored to be able to put your interests first for 14 years as we only answer to our readers and we will not compromise on that fundamental, core PoliticusUSA value.



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    Jason Easley

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  • The Best Red Carpet Fashion at the 2024 Grammy Awards

    The Best Red Carpet Fashion at the 2024 Grammy Awards

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    Dua Lipa attends the 66th Grammy Awards. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Awards season is upon us, and after a month of celebrating the best in film and television, it’s time to honor those in the recording industry. Tonight (Feb. 4), the 66th annual Grammy Awards will recognize the top artists, songs, albums and recordings of the past year, with Trevor Noah hosting the ceremony at Cypto.com Arena in Los Angeles.

    The best and brightest in the industry always come out to celebrate the biggest night in music; tonight, performers include Billie Eilish, Olivia Rodrigo, Joni Mitchell, Travis Scott, Luke Combs and Billy Joel, as well as SZA, who garnered the most nominations (a staggering nine) of any of the nominees this year. Other nominees

    The 2024 Grammy Awards, which air at 8 p.m. ET on CBS, will also feature three new categories: Best African Music Performance, Best Alternative Jazz Album and Best Pop Dance Recording.

    Before the Let’s not forget about the pre-show extravaganza, though, because A-listers always bring their sartorial best when it comes to dressing for the Grammys red carpet. Below, see all the best red carpet moments from the 2024 Grammy Awards.

    Subscribe to Observer’s Lifestyle Newsletter

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Taylor Swift. Billboard via Getty Images

    Taylor Swift

    in Schiaparelli

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Lana Del Rey. Billboard via Getty Images

    Lana Del Rey

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Madison Beer. Billboard via Getty Images

    Madison Beer

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Ellie Goulding. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Ellie Goulding

    in Zuhair Murad

    66th GRAMMY AWARDS Red carpet arrivals66th GRAMMY AWARDS Red carpet arrivals
    Bebe Rexha. Los Angeles Times via Getty Imag

    Bebe Rexha

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Jordin Sparks. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Jordin Sparks

    in Zigman 

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Elliot Grainge and Sofia Richie. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Elliot Grainge and Sofia Richie

    Richie in Saint Laurent 

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Halle Bailey. Billboard via Getty Images

    Halle Bailey

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Kelly Clarkson. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Kelly Clarkson

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Ice Spice. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Ice Spice

    in Baby Phat 

    66th GRAMMY AWARDS Red carpet arrivals66th GRAMMY AWARDS Red carpet arrivals
    Olivia Rodrigo. Los Angeles Times via Getty Imag

    Olivia Rodrigo

    in vintage Versace 

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Janelle Monáe. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Janelle Monáe

    in Giorgio Armani 

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Lenny Kravitz. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Lenny Kravitz

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Jon Batiste. Billboard via Getty Images

    Jon Batiste

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    John Legend and Chrissy Teigen. Getty Images for The Recording A

    John Legend and Chrissy Teigen

    Teigen in Sophie Couture 

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Doja Cat. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Doja Cat

    in Dilara Fındıkoğlu

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Alessandra Ambrosio. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Alessandra Ambrosio

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Miley Cyrus. Billboard via Getty Images

    Miley Cyrus

    in custom Maison Margiela

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Summer Walker. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Summer Walker

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Paris Hilton. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Paris Hilton

    in Reem Acra

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Coi Leray. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Coi Leray

    in Saint Laurent

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Heidi Klum. Billboard via Getty Images

    Heidi Klum

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Chlöe. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Chlöe Bailey

    in Guarav Gupta

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Gracie Abrams. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Gracie Abrams

    in Chanel

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Mark Ronson and Grace Gummer. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Mark Ronson and Grace Gummer

    in Gucci

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Fantasia Barrino. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Fantasia Barrino

    in Cong Tri

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Calvin Harris and Vick Hope. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Calvin Harris and Vick Hope

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Kat Graham. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Kat Graham

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Bonnie McKee. Billboard via Getty Images

    Bonnie McKee

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Billie Eilish. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Billie Eilish

    in Willy Chavarria

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Dua Lipa. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Dua Lipa

    in custom Courrèges

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Paris Jackson. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Paris Jackson

    in Celine

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Coco Jones. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Coco Jones

    in Celia Kritharioti

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Victoria Monet. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Victoria Monet

    in Versace 

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Brianna LaPaglia. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Brianna LaPaglia

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Julien Baker, Lucy Dacus and Phoebe Bridgers. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Julien Baker, Lucy Dacus and Phoebe Bridgers

    in Thom Browne

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Gayle King. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Gayle King

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Alix Earle. Billboard via Getty Images

    Alix Earle

    in Alexander McQueen

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Kelly Osbourne. Billboard via Getty Images

    Kelly Osbourne

    in Christian Siriano 

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Lainey Wilson. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Lainey Wilson

    in Balmain 

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Jameela Jamil. Billboard via Getty Images

    Jameela Jamil

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Brandi Carlile. Billboard via Getty Images

    Brandi Carlile

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Laverne Cox. Billboard via Getty Images

    Laverne Cox

    in Comme des Garçons

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Tessa Brooks. Billboard via Getty Images

    Tessa Brooks

    in Rabanne 

    66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals66th Annual GRAMMY Awards - Arrivals
    Haley Kalil. Billboard via Getty Images

    Haley Kalil

    66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet66th GRAMMY Awards - Red Carpet
    Charlotte Lawrence. Getty Images for The Recording A

    Charlotte Lawrence

    The Best Red Carpet Fashion at the 2024 Grammy Awards



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    Morgan Halberg

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  • Ian Tyson, half of Ian & Sylvia folk duo, dies at age 89

    Ian Tyson, half of Ian & Sylvia folk duo, dies at age 89

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    TORONTO — Ian Tyson, the Canadian folk singer who wrote the modern standard “Four Strong Winds” as one half of Ian & Sylvia and helped influence such future superstars as Joni Mitchell and Neil Young, died Thursday at age 89.

    The native of Victoria, British Columbia, died at his ranch in southern Alberta following a series of health complications, his manager, Paul Mascioli, said.

    Tyson was a part of the influential folk movement in Toronto with his first wife, Sylvia Tyson. But he was also seen as a throwback to more rustic times and devoted much of his life to living on his ranch and pursuing songs about the cowboy life.

    “He put a lot of time and energy into his songwriting and felt his material very strongly, especially the whole cowboy lifestyle,″ Sylvia Tyson said of her former husband.

    He was best known for the troubadour’s lament “Four Strong Winds” and its classic refrain about the life of a wanderer: “If the good times are all gone/Then I’m bound for movin’ on/I’ll look for you if I’m ever back this way.”

    Bob Dylan, Waylon Jennings and Judy Collins were among the many performers who covered the song. Young included “Four Strong Winds” on his acclaimed “Comes a Time” album, released in 1978, and two years earlier performed the song at “The Last Waltz” concert staged by the Band to mark its farewell to live shows.

    Tyson was born Sept. 25, 1933, to parents who emigrated from England. He attended private school and learned to play polo, then he discovered the rodeo.

    After graduating from the Vancouver School of Art in 1958, he hitchhiked to Toronto. He was swept up in the city’s burgeoning folk movement, where Canadians including Young, Mitchell and Gordon Lightfoot played in hippie coffee houses in the bohemian Yorkville neighborhood.

    Tyson soon met Sylvia Fricker and they began a relationship — onstage and off, moving to New York. Their debut album, “Ian & Sylvia,” in 1962 was a collection of mostly traditional songs. Their second album, 1964′s “Four Strong Winds,″ was the duo’s breakthrough, thanks in large part to its title track, one of the record’s only original compositions.

    Married in 1964, the pair continued releasing new records with regularity. But as the popularity of folk waned, they moved to Nashville and began integrating country and rock into their music. In 1969, the Tysons formed the country-rock band Great Speckled Bird, which appeared with Janis Joplin, the Band and the Grateful Dead among others on the “Festival Express” tour across Canada in 1970, later the basis for a documentary released in 2004.

    They had a child, Clay, in 1968 but the couple grew apart as their career began to stall in the ’70s. They divorced in 1975.

    Tyson moved back to western Canada and returned to ranch life, training horses and cowboying in Pincher Creek, Alberta, 135 miles south of Calgary. These experiences increasingly filtered through his songwriting, particularly on 1983′s “Old Corrals and Sagebrush.″

    In 1987, Tyson won a Juno Award for country male vocalist of the year and five years later he was inducted into the Canadian Music Hall of Fame alongside Sylvia Tyson. He was inducted into the Canadian Songwriters Hall of Fame in 2019.

    Despite damage to his voice resulting from a heart attack and surgery in 2015, Tyson continued to perform live concerts. But the heart problems returned and forced Tyson to cancel appearances in 2018.

    He continued to play his guitar at home, though. “I think that’s the key to my hanging in there because you’ve gotta use it or lose it,″ he said in 2019.

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  • John Mellencamp revisits ‘Scarecrow,’ his game-changing disc

    John Mellencamp revisits ‘Scarecrow,’ his game-changing disc

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    NEW YORK — An urgency in the ringing guitar and thunderous drums that opened the 1985 album “Scarecrow” was the first hint that this was something different for the artist then billed as John “Cougar” Mellencamp.

    The disc, which is getting the deluxe reissue treatment this week, stands as a rare reputation-changing work. It elevated Mellencamp from a generic heartland rocker to a serious artist with something to say, helping spark Farm Aid, a movement that lives on.

    In that first song, “Rain on the Scarecrow,” Mellencamp described the financial crisis that was swallowing family farms in the Midwest. The Indiana-bred singer embraced his roots in the anthem “Small Town.” At age 34, his writing in “Minutes to Memories” showed a new maturity about life.

    A high standard is maintained through the closer, “R.O.C.K. in the USA,” which neatly summarized the musical approach — even if Mellencamp had to be talked into putting it on the album.

    Ask him now, at age 71, whether “Scarecrow” represented an elevated standard, and you’ll discover the chip that remains on his shoulder. He’ll remind you of hit songs that predated the album.

    “I didn’t know,” he said, “because I didn’t know I had to change my game.”

    Still, the singer professionally christened “Johnny Cougar” against his will at age 21 admits he made five albums before making a good one. “Scarecrow” was No. 7, excepting one shelved when his first record company dropped him.

    “I think John really found his voice on this album,” said veteran music writer Anthony DeCurtis, who contributed liner notes to the reissue.

    “There were certainly signs of it before, like on ‘Jack and Diane’ and ‘Pink Houses,'” he said. “But the sense of him looking at the world, taking his personality as someone who grew up in Seymour, Indiana, and making a wider statement about it, that was all a big deal for him. It raised him to the level of someone who was an important musical voice in the culture.”

    As someone who didn’t think much about songwriting until he had a record deal, Mellencamp saw others around him setting a high benchmark and thought, “I better step up my game.” He mentioned Woody Guthrie, Bob Dylan, Bruce Springsteen and Joni Mitchell.

    As two chart-topping rockers aware of comparisons made between them, Springsteen and Mellencamp circled each other warily in the 1980s but are good friends today.

    You can see, in “Scarecrow,” Mellencamp creating a musical world from what he knew growing up in the Midwest, much like Springsteen did for the Jersey Shore. Mellencamp’s “Lonely Ol’ Night” is a thematic cousin to Springsteen’s 1984 hit “Dancing in the Dark” in the narrators’ late-night search for a connection.

    “What I learned from him was to be a good observer of life,” Mellencamp said. “You don’t have to be the person. You can watch. I’ve had people say to me, ‘John, have you ever had writer’s block?’ And I would say no, all you’ve got to do is look out the window.”

    He remembers a long conversation with his late friend and songwriting partner, George Green, wondering why so many of the small towns they knew were fading away. From those talks, they wrote “Rain on the Scarecrow.”

    The album’s cover features a serious-looking Mellencamp on a farm, a fuzzy scarecrow and tractor in the background. He dedicates it to his grandfather, Speck, who died at the end of 1983.

    After he made the record, he recalls another conversation with someone who was making some of their music videos, “who looked at me and said, ‘you know, this is a really special record for these times.’

    “I said, ‘You think so?’ he said. ”That was the first time I had ever given it any thought that it was much different than anything else I’d done.”

    With the spirit of Live Aid and the themes of “Scarecrow” in the air, Mellencamp helped organize the initial Farm Aid concert with Willie Nelson and Neil Young. To date, the organization says it has raised $64 million for family farming; Nelson and Mellencamp both appeared at its most recent show, in September in Raleigh, North Carolina.

    Mellencamp and his band were tight from years on the road in the mid-1980s, but he still gave them an assignment prior to making the new album: learn to play dozens of rock hits from the 1960s, a sound their leader wanted to recreate.

    They included several from artists name-checked in “R.O.C.K. in the USA.” Mellencamp didn’t want the song on “Scarecrow,” figuring it sounded “cartoonish” compared to the rest of the material. To his gratitude now, he listened to the pleas of record company executives to change his mind.

    Versions of songs from the band’s assignment, like James Brown’s “Cold Sweat” and “Shama Lama Ding Dong” from Otis Day & the Knights, make it on the “Scarecrow” reissue.

    “I don’t mean to sound arrogant,” he said, “but I was not surprised that people liked that record. I’m not surprised that ‘Small Town’ stuck around for as long as it has. I don’t listen to the radio anymore, but when I do, I always hear that song.”

    Through the 1980s, Mellencamp built a formidable jukebox worth of his own hits. But his time at the top coincided with his unhappiest time personally, and he stepped off.

    “I had a girlfriend over who was a real famous actress,” Mellencamp said (He didn’t drop names, but a good guess is Meg Ryan, who he dated for several years in the 2010s). “She looked at me one night and said, ‘You know, John, we’ve both been to the moon and we both know we don’t want to go back there.’ She was right.”

    He has a new album, “Orpheus Descending,” due out in February and a lengthy concert tour booked from February to May. Theaters, not arenas.

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