ReportWire

Tag: music

  • Universal Music and AI song tool Udio settle lawsuit and partner on new platform, sparking backlash

    [ad_1]

    LONDON (AP) — Universal Music Group and AI song generation platform Udio have settled a copyright infringement lawsuit and agreed to team up on new music creation and streaming platform, the two companies said in a joint announcement.

    Universal and Udio said Wednesday that they reached a “compensatory legal settlement” as well as new licensing agreements for recorded music and publishing that will “provide further revenue opportunities” for the record label’s artists and songwriters.

    As part of the deal, Udio immediately stopped allowing people to download songs they’ve created, which sparked a backlash and apparent exodus among paying users.

    The deal is the first since Universal, along with Sony Music Entertainment and Warner Records, sued Udio and another AI song generator, Suno, last year over copyright infringement.

    “These new agreements with Udio demonstrate our commitment to do what’s right by our artists and songwriters, whether that means embracing new technologies, developing new business models, diversifying revenue streams or beyond,” Universal CEO Lucian Grainge said.

    Financial terms of the settlement weren’t disclosed.

    Universal announced another AI deal on Thursday, saying it was teaming up with Stability AI to develop “next-generation professional music creation tools.”

    Udio and Suno pioneered AI song generation technology, which can spit out new songs based on prompts typed into a chatbot-style text box. Users, who don’t need musical talent, can merely request a tune in the style of, for example, classic rock, 1980s synth-pop or West Coast rap.

    Udio and Universal, which counts Taylor Swift, Olivia Rodrigo, Drake, and Kendrick Lamar among its artists, said the new AI subscription service will debut next year.

    Udio CEO Andrew Sanchez said in a blog post that people will be able to use it to remix their favorite songs or mashup different tunes or song styles. Artists will be able to give permission for how their music can be used, he said.

    However, “downloads from the platform will be unavailable,” he said.

    AI songs made on Udio will be “controlled within a walled garden” as part of the transition to the new service, the two companies said in their joint announcement.

    The move angered Udio’s users, according to posts on Reddit’s Udio forum, where they vented about feeling betrayed by the platform’s surprise move and complained that it limited what they could do with their music.

    One user accused Universal of taking away “our democratic download freedoms.” Another said “Udio can never be trusted again.”

    Many vowed to cancel their subscriptions for Udio, which has a free level as well as premium plans that come with more features.

    The deal shows how the rise of AI song generation tools like Udio has disrupted the $20 billion music streaming industry. Record labels accuse the platforms of exploiting the recorded works of artists without compensating them.

    The tools have fueled debate over AI’s role in music while raising fears about “AI slop” — automatically generated, low quality mass produced content — highlighted by the rise of fictitious bands passing for real artists.

    In its lawsuit filed against Udio last year, Universal alleged that specific AI-generated songs made on Udio closely resembled Universal-owned classics like Frank Sinatra’s “My Way,” The Temptations’ “My Girl” and holiday favorites like “Rockin’ Around the Christmas Tree” and “Jingle Bell Rock.”

    In the “My Girl” example, a written prompt on Udio that asked for “my tempting 1964 girl smokey sing hitsville soul pop” generated a song with a “very similar melody, the same chords, and very similar backing vocals” as the hit song co-written by Smokey Robinson and recorded by The Temptations in 1964, according to the lawsuit. A link to the AI-generated song on Udio now says “Track not found.”

    ___

    AP Technology Writer Matt O’Brien in Providence, Rhode Island contributed to this report.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Music Review: Florence + the Machine’s ‘Everybody Scream’ wrestles with greatness and mortality

    [ad_1]

    During his acceptance speech for best actor at this year’s Screen Actors Guild Awards, Timothée Chalamet made known his desire to be remembered as “one of the greats.” A few years earlier, Chalamet starred in Greta Gerwig’s adaptation of “Little Women,” in which his character demonstratively asks his future wife, “What women are allowed into the club of geniuses, anyway?”

    “Everybody Scream,” Florence + the Machine’s sixth album, is a response to that familiar, gendered notion. Across its 12 tracks, Florence Welch contends with both her desire for greatness and the constraints she understands to have been put on her as a female artist.

    It’s unclear if Welch had Chalamet’s viral speech in mind when writing, “One of the Greats,” the album’s lead single. But what is apparent in her brooding feminist treatise are grievances about sexism and male entitlement. “It must be nice to be a man and make boring music just because you can,” she belts over gothic synths and strings. But it’s a bit funny, too: “Now don’t get me wrong, I’m a fan, you’re my second favorite frontman.”

    Welch collaborated with Mark Bowen of IDLES for much of the record, as well as Mitski and Aaron Dessner of The National. Sometimes the collaborations create a haunting sound, but most of “Everybody Scream” is packed with the band’s signature orchestral pop, an ornate arrangement of strings, synths, guitars, pianos and percussion.

    Perhaps to a fault, “Everybody Scream” isn’t sonically dissimilar from what fans of Florence + the Machine have come to expect. But in a lyrical shift, Welch meditates heavily on mysticism and witchcraft throughout, something she turned to after suffering a nearly fatal ectopic pregnancy in 2023. The 39-year-old later revealed that she performed with a burst fallopian tube during her last tour and had to undergo emergency surgery.

    “I sit in salt water/Call in a vision of my daughter/Light a candle/Place my grief upon the altar,” her voice vibrates over haunting background vocals and an eerie electric guitar on “You Can Have It All.”

    The record is reminiscent of Halsey’s 2021 concept album, “If I Can’t Have Love, I Want Power,” where femininity and motherhood are juxtaposed with influence, respect and violence.

    There’s a similar rawness to Welch’s poetry, as she grapples with mortality and ambition. But, like life, it’s also accompanied by the mundane. “Downloading ‘Revelations of Divine Love’ on my phone/Trying to read but getting distracted/Trying to live but feeling so damaged,” she sings on “Perfume and Milk,” one of the more austere songs on the album.

    As a concept, “Everybody Scream” is stellar. There’s a sonic and thematic unity to the album and its Halloween release makes perfect sense.

    ___

    “Everybody Scream,” by Florence + the Machine

    Three and a half stars out of five.

    On repeat: “Sympathy Magic” and “Witch Dance”

    Skip it: “Music By Men”

    For fans of: witchy women, spooky season, second-wave feminism

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Pearland Halloween Light Display Thrill Neighborhood Kids

    [ad_1]

    Thursday, October 30, 2025 5:44PM

    Pearland Halloween Light Display Thrill Neighborhood Kids

    By choreographing dazzling lights and upbeat music, this Halloween display gets kids dancing instead of scaring them.

    PEARLAND, Texas — Halloween in the Southern Trails neighborhood comes with a new kind of treat this year. Dentist Jeremy Chance has transformed his home into a high-tech spectacle of synchronized lights and upbeat music, illuminating the community’s spooky season and spreading big smiles all around.

    [ad_2]

    CCG

    Source link

  • Bay Area arts: 11 shows and concerts to catch this weekend

    [ad_1]

    From classic movies with live music to new tunes from Vampire Weekend and a Grateful Dead Celtic band, there’s a lot to see and hear this weekend in the Bay Area.

    Here’s a partial rundown.

    Classical picks: Hitchcock + orchestra; New Century

    This week’s events light up the classical music scene with an iconic film score, a symphony at the opera, and a tribute to the seasons.

    [ad_2]

    Randy McMullen

    Source link

  • Best Bets: Día de Muertos, Korean Films, and David Sedaris – Houston Press

    [ad_1]

    This weekend, we celebrate Día de Muertos, welcome a new month, and acknowledge that tomorrow is National Knock Knock Joke Day. So, get your best one ready to tell whoever you invite to join you at one of our best bets. Keep reading for four days of Korean films, a concert of musical showstoppers, the return of one of the country’s preeminent humorists, and much more.  

    The police find a young woman standing over the dead body of a man, the author of a novel about a kidnapping. She claims the story is based on her own kidnapping, the author her kidnapper, but refuses to say more unless she can talk to a former classmate-turned-detective in Chun Sun-young’s 2024 thriller A Girl with Closed Eyes, which will open Korean Film Nights at the Museum of Fine Arts, Houston, on Thursday, October 30, at 7 p.m. The weekend-long festival returns for the seventh year with a selection of new and cult favorite films from South Korea, including Lee Min-jae’s zombie romcom, Zombie for Sale; the transplant recipients turned superheroes in Kang Hyeong-cheol’s Hi-Five; and Parasite director Bong Joon Ho’s 2009 film, Mother. Tickets to individual screenings are available for $8 to $10, and you can view the full schedule here.

    Though known for masterworks like La Boheme and Madame Butterfly, experience three of Giacomo Puccini’s less familiar one-acts – Il tabarro, Suor Angelica, and Gianni Schicchi – when Houston Grand Opera presents Il Trittico at the Wortham Theater Center on Thursday, October 30, at 7 p.m. Soprano Corinne Winters, who plays a role in each, told the Houston Press the program is “like reading short stories,” adding that audiences will find them “just as compelling as an episode of a binge-worthy TV show. Especially in these kinds of operas which are so real and so relatable I think they’re going to get lost in it.” Performances will continue at 2 p.m. on Sunday, November 2, and 7 p.m. on Saturday, November 8; Wednesday, November 12; and Friday, November 14. Tickets are available here for $25 to $367.50.

    Carol Channing first delivered “Diamonds Are a Girl’s Best Friend” in the 1949 stage production of Gentlemen Prefer Blondes, but it was Marilyn Monroe’s performance in Howard Hawks’ 1953 film version that earned it 12th place on the American Film Institute’s list of the 100 greatest works of American movie music. The song will be featured alongside showstoppers from musicals like West Side Story, The Sound of Music, and Cats during From Stage to Screen: Broadway Meets Hollywood at Jones Hall on Friday, October 31, at 7:30 p.m. Conductor Steven Reineke and the Houston Symphony will welcome Broadway stars Elizabeth Stanley and Hugh Panaro for the concert, which will be performed again at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, November 1, and 2 p.m. Sunday, November 2. In-hall tickets are available here for $29 to $141. Saturday night’s performance will be livestreamed, with access available here for $20.

    Día de Muertos, or Day of the Dead, is a time to honor those who have passed, a tradition celebrated throughout Mexico and parts of Latin America rooted in pre-Columbian beliefs and shaped by the Catholicism introduced by the Spanish in the early 1500s. On Saturday, November 1, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m., you can join the celebration during MECA’s 2025 Día de Muertos Festival: Honoring Our Past, Celebrating Our Future at the Historic Dow School. The celebration, free and open to the public, includes family-friendly art activities and cultural workshops, authentic Latin American crafts and flavors, and live music and dance performances from acts like Danza Azteca Macuilxochitl, Mexico Folklorico, and Grupo Aliados, as well as a curated exhibition of community ofrendas, or altars. The festival continues on Sunday, November 2, from 11 a.m. to 7 p.m.

    YouTube video

    A magazine contest gave Johann Strauss II the idea for his first and only full-length ballet in 1898. From more than 700 scripts, the winner was Aschenbrödel, which is Cinderella in German. Strauss died before completing the ballet, but not before moving the action to a department store, making the heroine a shop girl, finishing the first act, and sketching out the rest. On Sunday, November 2, at 7 p.m., you can see Stauss’ ballet (finished by composer Josef Bayer) when World Ballet Company presents Cinderella at the Wortham Theater Center, courtesy of Performing Arts Houston. The Los Angeles-based company boasts 40 professional ballet dancers from more than ten countries, hand-painted sets, and over 150 hand-sewn costumes in their touring production. Tickets can be purchased here for $33.90 to $141.25.

    The birth of an iconic, eleven-and-a-half-inch-tall blonde doll recounted by Renée Rosen. Rachel Cockerell’s deep dive into her great-grandfather’s role in relocating thousands of Russian Jews to Galveston. Mitch Albom‘s exploration of “love, time, and the ache of second chances.” They are all stories you can learn more about during the Ann and Stephen Kaufman Jewish Book & Arts Festival, which begins at the Evelyn Rubenstein Jewish Community Center of Houston on November 2 and runs through November 15. There are a variety of ticketing options available here, including individual event tickets for $16 to $84, premium tickets for $33 to $50, a book bundle plus ticket option for $32 to $39, access to virtual recordings for $16 to $25, a “Pick 3” subscription for $39 to $59, and a full festival subscription for one ($139 to $193) or two ($278 to $386).

    A production photo from A Beautiful Noise: The Neil Diamond Musical.
    Nick Fradiani as ‘Neil – Then’ with ‘The Noise’ and the Band in A Beautiful Noise: The Neil Diamond Musical. Credit: Jeremy Daniel

    Dr. Charles Steinberg believed that Neil Diamond’s “Sweet Caroline” had “transformative powers,” which is why the song became a well-known Fenway Park tradition. It’s one example of the reach Diamond’s music has, as is the success of A Beautiful Noise: The Neil Diamond Musical, coming to the Hobby Center for the Performing Arts on Tuesday, November 4, at 7:30 p.m. Jer, a member of the production’s ensemble dubbed “The Noise,” told the Houston Press, “If you love theatrical magic, I think our show does that so beautifully. We label this as a small intimate play with music.” Performances will continue at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday through Saturday, 1 p.m. Thursday, 2 p.m. Saturday, and 1:30 and 7 p.m. Sunday through November 9. Tickets can be purchased here for $55 to $265.

    Performing Arts Houston will once again bring David Sedaris, the humorist and best-selling author behind books like Calypso, Dress Your Family in Corduroy and Denim, and Let’s Explore Diabetes With Owls, to town on Tuesday, November 4, at 7:30 p.m. for An Evening with David Sedaris at Jones Hall.  Sedaris, who has a new collection of essays titled The Land and its People set to be published next summer, will read, tell stories, and participate in a Q&A session during the event. After the performance, Sedaris will stick around in the lobby for a book signing. If you’re without a book, or want to pick up a new one, Brazos Bookstore will be on hand with a selection of titles for you to purchase. Tickets to the evening can be purchased here for $33.35 to $113.85.

    [ad_2]

    Natalie de la Garza

    Source link

  • Sia’s estranged husband denied sole custody of son after he accused musician of drug abuse in emergency order

    [ad_1]

    NEWYou can now listen to Fox News articles!

    A judge denied Sia’s estranged husband an emergency custody request for their 19-month-old son Somersault (Summi) as part of their ongoing divorce, according to documents obtained by Fox News Digital.

    Dr. Daniel Bernad filed the request earlier this week, asking the court to grant him “sole legal and physical custody” of their son due to the “Chandelier” singer’s alleged “reckless” conduct. He also accused Sia of being “an unfit and unreliable parent struggling with substance abuse and addiction.” 

    The musician fired back that Summi never spent more than “two hours in Dan’s presence” without Sia and claimed the initial “restrictive, agreed-upon arrangements” established in August for their son were due to Bernad’s involvement in an investigation regarding alleged “illicit child pornography found on his computer hard drive.”

    NICOLE KIDMAN SHOWS KEITH URBAN WHAT HE’S MISSING AS COUNTRY STAR REPORTEDLY ‘MOVED ON’ FROM MARRIAGE

    A judge denied Sia’s estranged husband an emergency custody request for their 19-month-old son, Somersault (Summi), as part of their ongoing divorce, according to documents obtained by Fox News Digital. (Matteo Prandoni/BFA.com)

    On Wednesday, the court found “that sufficient exigency for the requested emergency relief has not been shown at this time,” documents state. 

    “The parties entered into a stipulated legal custody and interim physical custody arrangement on August 1, 2025. Most of the facts asserted in Respondent’s RFO were known at that time. The ex parte RFO is denied without prejudice. It may be resubmitted on the Court’s regular RFO calendar.”

    DANNY MASTERSON’S EX SEEKS LEGAL NAME CHANGE FOR 11-YEAR-OLD DAUGHTER FOLLOWING HIS RAPE CONVICTION

    Representatives for the estranged couple did not immediately respond to Fox News Digital’s request for comment.

    In Bernad’s emergency request, the oncologist claimed his estranged wife deliberately and repeatedly concealed “that she was hospitalized for two weeks in September” during a time when she was supposed to be in Italy with their son. 

    “She tested positive for barbiturates and benzodiazepines, with no legitimate medical explanation,” he claimed. “She unilaterally and unlawfully transferred written power of attorney over Summi to her nannies in direct violation of our joint legal custody agreement.”

    Sia posing onstage in pink headband and outsit

    Sia claimed her estranged husband never spent more than two hours unsupervised with their son. (Frazer Harrison)

    He alleged, “Sia is an unfit and unreliable parent struggling with substance abuse and addiction, rendering her incapable of providing safe or stable care for Summi. I am the only safe and reliable parent for our son. I am a doctor, young, healthy, and have no criminal history or drug or alcohol addiction issues. I request that the Court grant my Ex Parte to protect Summi from further harm and to guarantee that he is safe, secure and properly cared for.”

    LIKE WHAT YOU’RE READING? CLICK HERE FOR MORE ENTERTAINMENT NEWS

    Bernad claimed he witnessed Sia abuse “ketamine and other drugs” during their relationship. She allegedly purchased $20,000 worth of ketamine during a trip to Egypt and claimed she was “too famous and rich to ever get arrested.” 

    In another alleged incident, Bernad claimed he discovered Sia on the ground in her bedroom with “approximately $15,000 of ketamine in her pockets.”  

    The doctor also asked for more than $77,000 per month in child support and for Sia to be fiscally responsible for all childcare costs.

    In a response filed to her estranged husband’s request, the “Unstoppable” singer claimed she’s been sober for over six months and has “repeatedly agreed to drug testing.”

    sia and husband dan bernad masked at premiere

    Sia filed for divorce from Dan Bernad in March on the grounds of “irreconcilable differences.” (Valerie Macon)

    She acknowledged that the Los Angeles Police Department’s investigation into claims Bernad had child pornography on a hard drive was deemed “inconclusive” and “unfounded.” As of Oct. 2, the case had been closed/suspended due to no evidence of a crime.

    CLICK HERE TO SIGN UP FOR THE ENTERTAINMENT NEWSLETTER

    Sia filed for divorce from Bernad in March after two years of marriage, citing “irreconcilable differences.” 

    “Since filing the Petition in March 2025, Sia has paid Dan approximately $300,000 including $100,000 in May, $50,000 per month since August, and covering five months of his hotel accommodations and psychotherapy and other expenses,” she wrote. 

    “Dan’s attempt to weaponize my past sobriety journey – an issue long resolved and well-documented – serves no legitimate purpose and is intended only to distort the facts and undermine my credibility before this Court. His willingness to dredge up decades-old history to serve his own financial and strategic interests demonstrates the extent to which he will go, even at the expense of his child and the child’s mother.”

    CLICK HERE TO GET THE FOX NEWS APP

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Brace Yourselves, Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham Are Talking Again

    [ad_1]

    Old flames.
    Photo-Illustration: Vulture; Photos: Steve Jennings/WireImage, Lorne Thomson/Redferns

    All of those crystal circles paid off. Stevie Nicks and Lindsey Buckingham are back to being on speaking terms, several years after an estrangement caused by Buckingham’s firing from Fleetwood Mac and decades of relishing the most tumultuous (and hot) relationship in rock history. The duo appeared in separate interviews for the newest episode of Song Exploder, where they discussed the Buckingham Nicks track “Frozen Love,” the album of which was recently remastered for the first time in five decades. When asked if she recalled her first memory of meeting Buckingham when they were teenagers, our songstress relayed the following intel: “Lindsey and I started talking about it last night. This whole thing seems really like yesterday to us.” Creating that 1973 album, which predated their time in Fleetwood Mac, brought them closer together as romantic partners. “Our relationship was up and down and up and down and up and down and difficult, but at the same time fantastic,” Nicks explained. “And what we were doing was so fantastic, that it was worth putting up with the trials and tribulations of a relationship that’s difficult.”

    Nicks still draws comparisons between “Frozen Love” and certain works of literature, likening the song to a sonic version of Wuthering Heights or Great Expectations. “A modern-day love affair, tragedies. Because nobody really loves happy songs,” she said. “Certainly, I didn’t, and neither really did Lindsey.” Nicks also admitted that her pronunciation of “fate” in the song does indeed sound a bit like “hate” to certain listeners. “So, that’s not good. I’m sorry, Lindsey,” she added. “I’m calling him later.” The duo last spoke for “about three minutes” at Christine McVie’s celebration-of-life ceremony, which occurred in 2022. But if they wanted to float around the idea of a reunion tour with an extensive shawl budget, that would be all right with us.

    [ad_2]

    Devon Ivie

    Source link

  • Janelle Monáe Embraces HalloQueen Role, Creating an Empire Where Art and Freedom Collide in October

    [ad_1]

    LOS ANGELES (AP) — Just before Janelle Monáe’s DJ set at Cinespia — an outdoor movie series framed by the marble mausoleums of a storied Hollywood cemetery — the multi-hyphenated performer wasn’t just focused on rehearsing a setlist.

    Instead, Monáe paused to guide a symbolic circle inspired by “The Craft.”

    Inside a candle-lit mausoleum, Monáe and several close friends recreated a moment from the 1996 cult classic film that they would later introduce to a sold-out crowd at Hollywood Forever Cemetery. The group swayed and chanted, “Light as a feather, stiff as a board” before declaring “This is for the witches tonight.”

    “It’s really about community for me,” Monáe said backstage with The Associated Press before performing a 20-minute set. “We love the ritualistic nature of what Halloween means: being with your friends, embracing your magic and celebrating that together.”

    That brief circle of movement and music captured the essence of Monáe’s growing HalloQueen world, where the artist says play, performance and purpose meet under candlelight and bass lines. It’s all tied into the monthlong creative residency through a series of events reflective of Monáe’s passion for Halloween.

    “Halloween gives context to what I already do every day,” Monáe said. “As an artist, I’m always transforming, world-building and inviting people to play in the worlds I create.”


    The catalyst behind Monáe’s HalloQueen and events

    The HalloQueen experience reaches its peak this week with Vampire Beach, a large-scale festival at the Santa Monica Pier on Thursday, followed by the annual Wondaween party on Friday. The two signature events crown Monáe’s season of celebration.

    This year, Monáe is fully embracing the role of HalloQueen, turning October into both a playground and creative empire. What began as a love for dressing up as a child has grown into a movement that fuses self-expression under one brand.

    For Monáe, Halloween feels less like a holiday and more like homecoming.

    “I’ve loved transforming since I was a kid,” they said. “I create characters and worlds I want to live in. I’m just playing.”

    At Cinespia, Monáe’s set opened with Nina Simone’s “I Put a Spell on You,” casting a musical spell over a crowd of witches and movie lovers. Among them was actor Rachel True, who portrayed Rochelle in the original “The Craft.”

    “Janelle celebrates the kind of weird that used to make people uncomfortable,” True said after her surprise appearance. “I love that she embraces it so boldly. Back when I was coming up, I was told to be less weird, so to see that energy live on through Janelle means everything. We’re Black girls who own our weirdness, and we unite in that.”


    How Monáe built a world where art meets imagination

    The sense of play has always shaped Monáe’s creative universe from the tuxedo-clad android era to the futuristic gowns and otherworldly Halloween looks that have become their trademark.

    Each October, Monáe treats costumes like character studies: the Grinch’s daughter, a futuristic E.T., even a space-age take on classic horror icons. The performer also hosts AMC’s annual “FearFest.”

    Monáe channels that imagination into a monthlong residency of immersive experiences. The itinerary has already included Monáe Manor at the LA Haunted Hayride, a DJ set for “The Craft” at Cinespia and their starring role as Sally in Danny Elfman’s “The Nightmare Before Christmas” at the Hollywood Bowl over the past weekend.

    From costume design to music curation, each event carries Monáe’s fingerprints.

    “I consider myself a world-building experience architect,” they said. “I want people to look around and think, these were some of the best memories of my life.”

    On Thursday, the Vampire Beach event offers a playful twist on daylight creatures of the night. The event flows through Wondaween, the new umbrella brand linking Monáe’s music, film, gaming and live experiences.

    “Vampires can be in the sun now because of sunscreen,” Monae said, referencing a partnership with Vacation Sunscreen.


    The blueprint behind the Monáe multiverse

    Monáe’s creative foundation began with the Wondaland collective, co-founded with Nate “Rocket” Wonder and Chuck Lightning in Atlanta. That community of musicians, writers and filmmakers evolved into a multidisciplinary hub for world-building.

    Now, it serves as the backbone for Wondaween’s Halloween expansion. There’s a hope to bring that same spirit of collaboration to live and immersive events.

    “Wondaland has always represented art, community, imagination and pushing boundaries,” Monáe said. “Wondaween extends that vision. It’s a real-world destination for people who love creativity and want to feel free expressing it.”

    From student workshops with horror screenwriter Akela Cooper to curated game nights and immersive music events, Monáe views every project as a portal to connection.

    “Everything I build — from my albums to these events — sits under one creative umbrella,” Monáe said. “The universe made me multidimensional, and I want people to see all of those sides.”


    Will the HalloQueen expand into new worlds?

    What Monáe hopes participants feel after each event is lasting resonance. They see a moment still unfolding.

    For Monáe, HalloQueen represents both a celebration and a blueprint for what’s possible when creativity meets community. They envision taking the experience to other cities including Atlanta, Miami, Chicago and Kansas City, where the artist was born and raised.

    Each stop would feature a new theme, in what Monáe describes as “almost like the Met Gala for Halloween.”

    When October ends, Monáe channels that creative charge into future music and film projects.

    “The season inspires me to build new worlds,” they said. “It keeps me dreaming.”

    Copyright 2025 The Associated Press. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or redistributed.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    [ad_2]

    Associated Press

    Source link

  • Adobe’s ‘Corrective AI’ Can Change the Emotions of a Voice-Over

    [ad_1]

    Adobe’s Oriol Nieto loaded up a short video with a handful of scenes and a voice-over, but no sound effects. The AI model analyzed the video and broke it down into scenes, applying emotional tags and a description of each scene. Then, the sound effects came. The AI model picked up on a scene with an alarm clock, for instance, and automatically created a sound effect. It identified a scene where the main character (an octopus, in this case) was driving a car, and it added a sound effect of a door closing.

    It wasn’t perfect. The alarm sound wasn’t realistic, and in a scene where two characters were hugging, the AI model added an unnatural rustling of clothes that didn’t work. Instead of manually editing, Adobe used a conversational interface (like ChatGPT) to describe changes. In the car scene, there was no ambient sound from the car. Rather than manually selecting the scene, Adobe used the conversational interface and asked the AI model to add a car sound effect to the scene. It successfully found the scene, generated the sound effect, and placed it perfectly.

    These experimental features aren’t available, but they usually work their way into Adobe’s suite. For instance, Harmonize, a feature in Photoshop that automatically places assets with accurate color and lighting in a scene, was shown at Sneaks last year. Now, it’s in Photoshop. Expect them to pop up sometime in 2026.

    Adobe’s announcement comes mere months after video game voice actors ended a nearly year-long strike to secure protections around AI—companies are required to get consent and provide disclosure agreements when game developers want to recreate a voice actor’s voice or likeness through AI. Voice actors have been bracing for the impact AI will have on the business for some time now, and Adobe’s new features, even if they’re not generating a voice-over from scratch, are yet another marker of the shift AI is forcing on the creative industry.

    [ad_2]

    Jacob Roach

    Source link

  • Young Russian Street Musicians Who Played Anti-Kremlin Songs Get More Jail Time

    [ad_1]

    ST PETERSBURG (Reuters) -A group of young Russian street musicians who went viral on social media for playing banned anti-Kremlin songs received more jail time on Wednesday, as authorities crack down on buskers who have staged performances across Russia in support of them.

    The members of the band Stoptime were arrested earlier this month after performing the popular song “Swan Lake Cooperative” by exiled Russian rapper Noize MC – who is openly critical of the Kremlin – on a busy street in St Petersburg.

    “The power of music is important, and what is happening now proves it,” the group’s 18-year-old vocalist Diana Loginova told reporters ahead of Wednesday’s court hearing.

    Stoptime’s show on the central Nevsky Prospekt has spawned several solidarity performances of other anti-Kremlin songs by young buskers across multiple Russian cities, including Yekaterinburg, Moscow and St Petersburg. Several of the musicians have been arrested and charged with petty crimes.

    “Swan Lake Cooperative” was banned in Russia in May on the grounds it contained “hostile, hateful attitudes towards people” and promoted “violent changes to the foundation of the constitutional order”. The song makes no explicit reference to Russian President Vladimir Putin or the conflict in Ukraine.

    Public expressions of dissent are rare in Russia, which has cracked down on any opposition to the Kremlin’s policies with lengthy prison sentences.

    Stoptime’s vocalist Loginova received a 13-day sentence for petty hooliganism on Wednesday. She has already completed a separate 13-day sentence in connection with the Noize MC performance and was fined 30,000 roubles ($369) on Tuesday for singing another song by a different anti-Kremlin artist.

    Alexander Orlov, the group’s guitarist, was jailed for 13 days on Wednesday on charges of illegally organising a rally, while drummer Vladislav Leontyev is facing a fresh administrative charge. The two have already served short stints in jail this month.

    Maxim Reznik, a former opposition politician in local government in St Petersburg, said he thought authorities would struggle to suppress the street performances.

    “We are dealing with a whole generation of people who are unwilling to put up with what is happening,” he told independent television channel Dozhd (TV Rain), which is banned in Russia and operates from Amsterdam.

    “No matter how much the authorities tighten their repression, they will not be able to suppress the will to resist.”

    (Reporting by Reuters in St Petersburg; Writing by Lucy Papachristou in Tbilisi; Editing by Peter Graff)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    [ad_2]

    Reuters

    Source link

  • Houston Concert Watch 10/29: Devo, B-52s and More – Houston Press

    [ad_1]

    Back in the ‘70s, Las Vegas was about as unhip as things could get.  Well, that is, unless you went all Hunter Thompson, driving into town with a head full of acid in a Cadillac land yacht with the idea of causing as much confusion and destruction as possible.

    By the early part of Richard Nixon’s second term, the glory days of the Rat Pack were long gone, and Las Vegas had lost any sense of “ring-a-ding-ding.”  No, fifty some-odd years ago, Las Vegas was a place that catered to bourgeois conventioneers and tourists.  Folks who were thrilled to see acts like Wayne “Mr. Las Vegas” Newton, Liberace, Neil Diamond, Tony Orlando and Dawn, Donny and Marie Osmond, Barry Manilow and Paul Anka.  Not to mention Sigfried and Roy, in their salad days before the latter became an hors d’oeuvre.

    But these days, we seem to be experiencing a similar paradigm, i.e. Las Vegas being populated by relatively well-heeled sixty-ish and seventy-ish vacationers who are willing to shell out big bucks to see the big bands of yesteryear.  Recently announced acts booked for Vegas residencies in 2026 include the Eagles, Styx, Santana, Def Leppard, Foreigner and Chicago.

    It was bound to happen, but somehow it seems sad to see the wild-ass hell raisers of our (well, at least my) youth playing in such safe and conventional venues.  I am reminded of Joan Cusack’s line from the film Grosse Pointe Blank.  When asked what it was like attending her high school reunion, she answered, “It was just as if everyone had swelled.”  Indeed.

    Ticket Alert

    A passel of shows at Toyota Center has just been announced.  On Saturday, April 4, it’s ‘80s hitmakers New Edition headlining a bill that includes Boys II Men and Toni Braxton.  Meet and greet / photo opportunity packages are on sale now along with various presales, and the general sale is set for Friday.  Demi Lovato’s “It’s Not That Deep” tour – her first in three years – rolls into Houston on Monday, May 25.  Curiously, no presales are listed, but you can get to clicking Friday morning at 10 a.m.

    Florence + The Machine (Really?  We can’t just say “and”?) is booked at Toyota Center on Tuesday, May 5, as part of the band’s “Everybody Scream” tour in support of the album of the same name, which drops on Friday.  Tickets go on sale next Wednesday, November 5.  The “R&B Lovers” tour, which boasts a lineup including Keith Sweat, Joe, Dru Hill and Ginuwine, will be at Toyota Center on Saturday, June 6, and tickets are on sale this Friday.

    As for other venues in town, the White Oak Music Hall will host Echo and the Bunnymen on Wednesday, May 27.  The lads from Liverpool have gone through a bunch of band members since the group’s formation in 1978, and these days it’s only original members Will Sergeant and Ian McCulloch leading the charge, backed by various touring musicians.  Tickets for the Houston installment of the “More Songs to Learn and Sing” tour are on sale as we speak.

    Concerts This Week

    YouTube video

    In recent years, appearance on a talent-based reality show has become a pathway to stardom.  In the case of Canadian performer Tate McRae, it was “So You Think You Can Dance” (produced by the same folks as “American Idol”) that pushed her into the popular consciousness in 2016.  McRae embarked on a singing career soon after, releasing a number of singles and a couple of EP’s, followed by three albums.  Her most recent effort, So Close to What, reached No. 1 in the U.S. and in several other countries around the world.  You can see what all the fuss is about on Saturday at Toyota Center.

    YouTube video

    Lainey Wilson canceled her scheduled appearance at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion last month, citing the recommendation of her vocal coach.  Evidently, all is now well with the country chanteuse’s vocal cords, and the postponed show will commence on Saturday. 

    YouTube video

    Fans of a certain age and a certain bent will be excited to know that the B-52s (no apostrophe, dammit!)  and Devo will co-headline a show on Sunday at the Cynthia Woods Mitchell Pavilion.  The billing makes perfect sense, in that both bands emerged and about the same time (around 1980) with material that was nothing like anything else on the radio.  Lene Lovich, who was also freaking people out around then, will open.

    YouTube video

    It would seem that Leon Thomas’ “Mutts Don’t Heel” tour is selling well, since the R&B artist’s gig scheduled for Tuesday at the House of Blues has been moved to the Bayou Music Center.  All tickets for the House of Blues show will be honored at the new venue.  ‘Cause Knowledge is Power: Thomas began his performing career on Broadway, appearing in “The Lion King” and “The Color Purple.”

    [ad_2]

    Tom Richards

    Source link

  • Lily Allen’s Brutal Breakup Album Centers on Heartache at Her Brooklyn Brownstone

    [ad_1]

    A FaceTime call featured in the album’s opening track sets the scene for a shift in Allen’s personal life. Her husband wants to open their marriage, and by track four, “Tennis,” he seems to be engaged in an affair with a woman the couple knows. “Who the fuck is Madeline?” Allen repeatedly cries, a question she answers on the following song of the same name. On “Madeline,” she sings about messaging a woman her husband has been sleeping with: “We had an arrangement / Be discreet and don’t be blatant / There had to be payment / It had to be with strangers / But you’re not a stranger, Madeline.” In an interview with The Times, Allen insisted that Madeline was “a fictional character,” but a costume designer named Natalie Tippett has claimed in an interview with The Mail On Sunday that she is the mystery woman in question.

    Allen, who has been sober since 2019, admits she struggled with feeling the “need to be numb” in “Relapse.” On another track, “Dallas Major,” she playfully croons about DM’ing other men under an alias in an effort to appease her husband’s arrangement: “So I go by Dallas Major but that’s not really my name / You know I used to be quite famous, that was way back in the day / Yes I’m here for validation and I probably should explain / How my marriage has been opened since my husband went astray.”

    Some of the most pointed accusations arrive in the song “Pussy Palace,” in which Allen sings about taking some of her partner’s things to the couple’s West Village apartment, where her husband stayed for a period. While there, she discovered a plastic Duane Reade bag, “with the handles tied / sex toys, butt plugs, lube inside.” Upon finding Pandora’s box, Allen wonders aloud, “am I looking at a sex addict?”

    [ad_2]

    Savannah Walsh

    Source link

  • Russian Street Musician Found Guilty of ‘Discrediting’ the Army After She Played Anti-Kremlin Songs

    [ad_1]

    ST PETERSBURG, Russia (Reuters) -An 18-year-old Russian street musician jailed for nearly two weeks earlier this month for playing a banned anti-Kremlin song was found guilty on Tuesday of “discrediting” the Russian army and fined 30,000 roubles ($369).

    Diana Loginova, a music student who performs under the name Naoko with her band Stoptime, was arrested on October 15 after her performance of the popular song “Swan Lake Cooperative” by exiled Russian rapper Noize MC went viral on Russian social media.

    Loginova served a 13-day jail sentence for organising an unplanned gathering that blocked public access to the metro – an administrative, as opposed to criminal, offence. Two of her bandmates also served short jail terms.

    Upon completion of her sentence, authorities charged Loginova with an additional administrative offence of “discrediting” the Russian military in connection with her public performance of another song, called “You are a soldier”.

    The St Petersburg court found her guilty on Tuesday of “discrediting” the Russian army for playing that song.

    The artist who wrote it, Monetochka, lives abroad and was placed on Russia’s wanted list last year. She has also been labelled a “foreign agent” by the Russian government.

    A Reuters reporter in the courtroom said Loginova was not released from custody following the ruling on Tuesday. Instead, Interior Ministry officers drove away with her from the courthouse in a civilian car.

    Loginova went viral earlier this month after video posted online showed her playing the Noize MC song “Swan Lake Cooperative” on St Petersburg’s Nevsky Prospekt as onlookers chanted along.

    Noize MC is openly critical of the Kremlin and lives in Lithuania. Russian banned his song in May on the grounds it contained “hostile, hateful attitudes towards people” and promoted “violent changes to the foundation of the constitutional order”.

    Last week, another young street musician, Yevgeny Mikhailov, was jailed for 14 days in the Urals city of Yekaterinburg after he performed songs by Noize MC and other anti-Kremlin artists in support of Loginova and her bandmates.

    Mikhailov was found guilty of petty hooliganism and “discrediting” the Russian army, according to independent news outlet Mediazona.

    (Reporting by Reuters in St Petersburg; Writing by Lucy Papachristou in Tbilisi; Editing by Guy Faulconbridge)

    Copyright 2025 Thomson Reuters.

    Photos You Should See – Oct. 2025

    [ad_2]

    Reuters

    Source link

  • ‘MTV Was a Lot Like Kabul’

    [ad_1]

    Cyndi Lauper leading the crowd at the first MTV New Year’s Eve party at Times Square.
    Photo: Allan Tannenbaum/Getty Images

    The news that MTV is shutting down its music channels does not come as a surprise to me. Starting in 1986, I ran MTV, VH1, Nickelodeon, Comedy Central, and other cable TV networks for 17 years as the CEO of MTV Networks, the sun in Viacom’s solar system. It hasn’t been that for a while. MTV has been losing credibility for years, and it’s devolved into a dumping ground for B-grade reality shows. No new music energy has been pumped into it for ages. 

    Only the U.K. music channels are affected for now, but the United States can’t be far behind. The business case for running music videos on a linear TV cable network in this increasingly digital, on-demand world is terrible and only getting worse. Why sit around and wait for Beyoncé when you can summon her video with a simple click?

    David Ellison, who recently acquired Paramount Global from Viacom, has an opportunity to step back and try to reimagine MTV as a new destination outside the confines of a linear TV network. The music space is now dominated with increasingly predictive and boring algorithms. Maybe there is a way to shake up at least a corner of the huge music market like we did back in 1981, when I was just the marketing guy arriving at the start-up that would become MTV. 

    After we busted through the cable-operator gates with “I Want My MTV,” we became the new gatekeepers. Everyone wanted to be on MTV. Labels and artists lobbied to get their videos in heavy rotation. We could catapult nobodies to stardom in weeks. There was a lot of power to wield, and power doesn’t always bring out the best in people.

    We were in the Zeitgeist business, so we took a lot of chances with new things, not always successfully. If something didn’t work, it died a quick death, and we moved on. We decided we weren’t going to grow old with our audience the way Rolling Stone magazine had — they were still writing about Bob Dylan and Eric Clapton. We would refresh and reinvent MTV every four to five years as one group aged out and a new one replaced it.

    Advertisers pay a higher premium to reach young people. The thinking is: Hook them on Crest or Pepsi or Ford early on and you’ve got a customer for life. When MTV said, “We have a direct line to them,” Madison Avenue lined up at our door.

    One by one, record labels agreed to give us clips for free, and they set up whole departments dedicated to servicing MTV. But they never stopped grumbling. They complained about the money they had to spend to increase the quantity and quality of their music videos. So we agreed to pay them millions of dollars through new, multiyear “output deals.” Buried in those deals was a clause granting us exclusivity for six months over any other 24-hour channel on 20 percent of their music videos. The 20 percent of the videos we picked were all the big hits. No potential competitor could take a run at us without access to the hits.

    I was against using hard-nosed tactics with the record companies and artists. Gatekeepers with a heart seemed the best way to prolong our prominence. As “the biggest radio station in the nation,” I argued, we should be fair, humble, and walk softly; the labels were predisposed to resent us. My opinion didn’t always carry the day. I watched some of our talent-relations people blossom into megalomaniacs. I guess it’s human nature that if you are hanging out on boats with Billy Idol and partying with Van Halen and strolling into every dressing room while giving thumbs-up or down to anxious managers, it will eventually turn you into an asshole. I saw it happen again and again.

    A recruit to the Music & Talent department with good ears and a deep knowledge of pop and rock might last three years. To fire them, we might have to find a concierge to kick down a door in an L.A. hotel and revive them after a three-day cocaine binge. We needed a strong human-resources department.

    Tom Freston at a promotional event in 1987.
    Photo: Alan Gilbert/Fairfax Media via Getty Images

    We were witnesses and eager participants in the last display of the legendary excesses of the music business. The party really kicked into gear when Bob Pittman made former radio DJ and label executive Les Garland the head of programming. Les was the one who had gotten Mick Jagger to scream, “I want my MTV.” He referred to himself in the third person as “the Gar Man,” which tells you a lot. Les Garland wasn’t his real name. Like many former radio people on our staff, he created a radio name. “Les Garland” was really Lester Schweikert.

    He looked about my age, but to this day I don’t think his date of birth has ever been revealed. He was an effervescent, good-looking guy with stylish curly brown hair, confident that he was the king of cool. In many ways he was. MTV’s fingers were in every pie of the music-industry machinery and for a while, most things came through or went out from Les. He arrived with deep music-business relationships, full of war stories from the rock-and-roll trenches of the ’70s, which he recounted to entertain his younger minions. It was like David Lee Roth had arrived in an Armani suit and taken over the floor.

    Amid towering speakers, gold records, stacks of videotapes, Sony Trinitrons, overflowing ashtrays, and a bar stocked with tequila and a lineup of squat green Dom Pérignon bottles sent over by the labels, the Les Garland Show streamed. Every time a big ad sale landed, he rang a huge bell. Grizzled label-promotion men in satin jackets and facial hair would slink in and out, usually laughing. Rod Stewart would drop by to play his newest tracks. When female artists came calling, his staff would vacate, and according to office lore, the Gar Man would fornicate with a lucky few. At least, that’s the legend. With Les, it was hard to tell what was true, what was myth, and what was scandal.

    When he wasn’t there, others would sneak in to have sex in his office. At one Christmas party, a staffer full of holiday bravado cozied up to Garland and said, “Les, I just want you to know that I fucked one of your assistants last night on your desk.” Les clinked his glass, said, “Congratulations, Bud,” and walked away.

    Big blowout parties became part of company mythology. “Tequila girls” in short shorts and cowboy hats, decked out in bandolier sashes packed with shot glasses, always circulated. Tequila bottles were nestled in holsters strapped across their hips. Bands like the Fabulous Thunderbirds would play. These parties could go on to three or four in the morning, sometimes devolving into after-parties. You could never get away with this kind of office party nowadays. Nonetheless, the next day, a line would form outside the human-resources offices.

    The Gar Man undeniably upped our game, our profile, our whole tempo. I had spent nearly a decade in the 1970s running a clothing export company out of India and Afghanistan and to me, MTV was a lot like Kabul. An exotic new place with a crazy cast of wild characters and few rules.

    A superfan myself, I had the privilege of attending any concert I wanted. Every day we dealt with the biggest stars in the world, along with all the black sheep and characters who handled them. Even though music drove the culture, the business of music was still considered the lowest rung of the entertainment ladder. To people in film and television, it was a lowbrow world of payola, shysters, and semi-gangsters in sharkskin suits. But these were the folks I liked the most. They had hustle, were clever, and loved music. They were also the most fun. Some label heads, like Gil Friesen, who ran A&M, Jeff Ayeroff, who ran Virgin, and Jimmy Iovine, who ran Interscope, became good friends. Many in the MTV crowd had not been to or finished college. I went undercover with my academic credentials. It sounded a lot better to be “the man from Afghanistan” than the M.B.A. from NYU.

    People worked in flip-flops and bathing suits; some slept in their offices. In 1988, at 2 a.m., an overnighter flipped a lit cigarette into his garbage can and burned down a whole floor at 1775 Broadway. Nineteen firefighters were hospitalized. The local radio stations would play Springsteen’s “I’m on Fire” and dedicate it to us.

    “Exotic dancers” would be sent over by the music labels. Bands passed through all the time. Lemmy from Motörhead might wander by with a bottle of tequila. We had one receptionist who sold cocaine. Many of the staff found that convenient. Cocaine was rampant in the ’80s, especially in the music industry. Even your dry cleaner was doing it then. People thought coke was the new No-Doz, a harmless pick-me-up powder.

    One of the programming guys, a jovial, former radio hotshot whom Howard Stern had crowned “Pig Virus,” kept his stash in a little plastic receptacle in his desk drawer, the place where you’d put paper clips. In a meeting, he’d nonchalantly open the drawer and take a hit off a collar stay, then politely look around. “Anyone need their beak packed?”

    MTV wasn’t a job; MTV was a life. We were a second family. People would duck out all the time to the bar around the corner. At night, there was always a smorgasbord of things to choose from … concerts, dinners, listening parties, movie screenings. We were in the middle of everything, so we were invited to everything. Not everybody made it out the other side; there were casualties with all the late nights, alcohol, and drugs. No one except me had a family. Margaret and I had a young son, Andrew, at home, which kept me pretty much on the straight and narrow. Once he went to sleep, I could head back out on the town.

    To try to prop up the business side and bring order to the chaos, Pittman installed a series of general managers. They didn’t take. One, David Hilton, undermined his predecessor and then went down in flames. Hilton had zero music chops, which earned him zero respect. I’ve never seen anyone do a worse job at anything. He sent around a note to announce that if anyone was even one minute late to a meeting, they’d be locked out. He locked his door and put a chair under the doorknob. Sometimes we’d all be purposely late so he’d have to have his meeting by himself.

    Robert Downey Jr. and Slash at the 1988 MTV Video Music Awards.
    Photo: Barry King/WireImage

    In 1984, MTV held the first Video Music Awards at Radio City Music Hall. We were positioning ourselves as the irreverent alternative to the self-serious Grammy Awards. Bette Midler and Dan Aykroyd hosted. The Cars’ “You Might Think” won Best Video, and Herbie Hancock’s “Rockit” won pretty much everything else. Madonna rolled around on the stage in a wedding dress while singing “Like a Virgin,” and a star was born.

    When MTV began, we played almost any video we could get our hands on. As we proved our ability to sell records, the bigger stars with bigger budgets pushed aside the punkier stuff. The record companies began to crank up music-video production. Instead of four or five new clips a week, we began to get 50 or 60. Big star holdouts like Bruce Springsteen joined in. Older acts like ZZ Top reengineered their image. Lionel Richie spent $1 million on his “Dancing on the Ceiling” video.

    As MTV became more influential, we also got more scrutiny, and not just from the Christian right. The criticism that stung was that we were not playing Black artists. In a very awkward interview with VJ Mark Goodman, David Bowie challenged him about the channel’s color line. Rick James went on a public crusade about us rejecting his “Super Freak.” He was right.

    Rock radio went backward after the 1960s, when the Beatles and Stones shared airtime and formats with the Supremes and Aretha. The early MTV music programmers came from the world of ’70s FM rock radio, which relied on a format called “album-oriented rock,” or AOR. It was a very researched system but predicated on an underlying racism. “Our audience wants to hear a guitar,” was the refrain from the programming guys. AOR resegregated rock and roll.

    In the 1980s, the record companies all had “Black Music” departments. The trade magazines, Billboard, Cash Box, and Radio & Records, all had separate Black Music charts. It wasn’t just MTV. But we were the only music channel on television. Early MTV did play some Black artists who fit the AOR format — Joan Armatrading, Grace Jones, Eddy Grant’s “Electric Avenue.” We gave heavy play to Prince’s “Little Red Corvette” and “1999.” But that doesn’t excuse the sad fact that the music department would put Hall & Oates doing R&B in heavy rotation, while ignoring Luther Vandross and the Brothers Johnson.

    The wall was finally knocked down by Michael Jackson’s Thriller. CBS Records chief Walter Yetnikoff always claimed that he forced MTV to play Michael Jackson by saying that if we did not, he would pull all Columbia and Epic videos from the channel. It’s a good story, but I have never found anyone who worked at MTV who had any idea what Walter was talking about. “Billie Jean” was a smash from day one. We wanted that video on our channel. “Beat It” was even better. By the time MJ released the video for “Thriller” toward the end of 1983, he and MTV were in a mutually beneficial relationship. We played his 13-minute mini-movie on the hour, every hour. I ran ads in People magazine with start times. Our ratings went through the roof, and so did Jackson’s album sales.

    In the late ’80s, we opened the aperture further. We were the biggest music outlet in the world; there was no need to follow anyone. MTV would be the first to mainline hip-hop into Middle America’s living rooms with Yo! MTV Raps, hosted by downtown Renaissance man Fab 5 Freddy. Aerosmith and Run-DMC sanctified the rock-rap connection with the clever video “Walk This Way,” and we were off into a whole new world.

    But before that came our next powerhouse: the July 1985 16-hour Live Aid extravaganza held simultaneously in London and Philadelphia. At the time, it was the biggest satellite linkup and television broadcast ever. It raised almost $200 million for African famine relief and would set a template for the many all-star fundraising concerts to follow.

    Paul McCartney, Elton John, and David Bowie were on the bill in London. Fans saw a career-making performance by U2 and a showstopper by Queen. Phil Collins performed at Wembley, then jumped on the Concorde to play another set at JFK Stadium in Philadelphia, where Mick Jagger tore off Tina Turner’s skirt.

    I rented a car and drove from New York with Bob Friedman, my eager marketing foot soldier, known internally as “the V” for reasons no one remembers. When we got there, we realized our credentials were in the hands of a producer who had disappeared. This was the pre-cell-phone era. There was no one to call. We finally found our way to the artists’ enclosure and jumped the fence. I landed in the dirt right in front of Bob Dylan’s trailer, dusted myself off, and then calmly strolled down lanes of trailers, striking the pose of someone who belonged.

    It was like wandering through the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame trailer park. Signs read: Tom Petty, Santana, Madonna, the Beach Boys, the Four Tops, Neil Young. We finally made it to the stage, and I spent the entire show at our news desk, 20 feet from the action. Live Aid was the final step in the legitimization of MTV. We were now like “Kleenex” and “Coke.” That year, we made the covers of Time and Newsweek. As for David Hilton, Pittman finally showed him the door and crowned me general manager. It was my 40th birthday. I had finished my apprenticeship and was ready to run the beast. I got a very warm welcome. Always follow an unpopular person into a job if you can.

    Copyright © 2025 by Tom Freston. From the forthcoming book UNPLUGGED: Adventures from MTV to Timbuktu by Tom Freston, to be published by Gallery Books, an Imprint of Simon & Schuster, LLC. Printed by permission.

    ‘Unplugged: Adventures From MTV to Timbuktu’ by Tom Freston









    Want to be emailed when products you’ve saved are over 20% off?


    Success! You’ll get an email when something you’ve saved goes on sale.

    Yes

    [ad_2]

    Tom Freston

    Source link

  • OpenAI is Reportedly Developing a Music Tool. Here’s How It Could Enhance Your Marketing Strategy

    [ad_1]

    OpenAI is reportedly developing a generative music tool. While no release date has been announced, it would allow users to create music for videos or vocal tracks based on text and audio prompts, according to a report in The Information

    For founders, marketers, and ad pros, this could mean creating demos for a catchy jingle or moody soundtrack to reflect the voice and tone of their brand in minutes. Think the next “I’m lovin’ it” or “Nationwide is on your side.” 

    One of The Information’s sources says a group of students at the Juilliard School is helping annotate scores to train the AI model. But training has been a point of contention in AI music. In June of 2024, some of the largest record labels in the world, including Warner Music Group and Universal Music Group, sued Suno AI and Uncharted Labs, alleging that the companies unlawfully trained their generative AI on copyrighted music.

    The Recording Industry Association of America, representing the labels, added another complaint to the lawsuit in September. It claimed Suno used stream ripping, a version of music piracy, to download the copyrighted recordings from YouTube.

    Spotify has also been under fire recently for streaming AI music and other AI connections. According to AI Magazine, musicians are boycotting the platform after its CEO invested in Helsing, a military AI company. English band Massive Attack objected to artists’ work and fans’ money contributing to funding “lethal, dystopian technologies.” 

    While AI-generated bands and their creators have faced backlash from fans, like this summer’s Velvet Sundown mess, AI music often celebrated in the ad world. Last year, for example, Red Lobster made a splash by using AI to write 30 songs, across genres, about its Cheddar Bay Biscuits.

    Keep Reading:

    [ad_2]

    Ava Levinson

    Source link

  • Demi Lovato announces concert tour with a stop in the Bay Area

    [ad_1]

    Demi Lovato is finally returning to the road.

    And she’s coming to the Bay Area.

    Lovato has announced dates for The It’s Not That Deep Tour — her first major headlining jaunt in three years — and it includes a stop on May 11 at Chase Center in San Francisco.

    The Lovato tour features special guest ADÉLA.

    Lovato will be supporting her latest studio album, “It’s Not That Deep,” which hit stores last week.

    “Lovato’s ‘It’s Not That Deep’ era revisits the dance-pop sound laced throughout her previous hit records and brings a celebratory energy that’s about taking full control while letting inhibitions go, featuring tracks that demand late nights and dancefloors,” according to a news release.

    [ad_2]

    Jim Harrington

    Source link

  • Drake joins Vybz Kartel for historic Canadian show | Globalnews.ca

    [ad_1]

    TORONTO – When Drake was a teenager, he’d stand outside Toronto’s long-gone Escape Nightclub handing out flyers just to get inside and lose himself in Vybz Kartel’s music. On Sunday night, he came full circle, recalling that memory on stage as he welcomed the dancehall star for his first-ever Canadian concert at Scotiabank Arena.

    Kartel, dressed head to toe in Blue Jays gear, kicked off night one of three sold-out Toronto shows at the venue, becoming the first Jamaican artist to achieve the milestone.

    “Look at all these people right here, how much time we’ve spent with this man’s music right here,” Drake told a frenzied crowd.

    Moments earlier, the Toronto rapper made a surprise appearance, performing a string of hits — including 2016’s “Controlla” and this year’s “Nokia” — from a balcony in the arena’s lower level.

    “We’ve been waiting to see you our whole [expletive] lives. Welcome home — we’re so happy to have you,” Drake told Kartel before asking permission to play some songs.

    Story continues below advertisement

    The Toronto shows, presented by Drake’s company OVO, have been long-awaited by Canadian fans. Born Adidja Palmer, Vybz Kartel is one of dancehall’s most influential — and controversial — figures. He rose to prominence in the early 2000s with hits blending dancehall and hip-hop, and continued releasing music even after his 2014 murder conviction and life sentence. Several albums, including 2016’s Billboard-charting “King of the Dancehall,” were recorded covertly from prison.

    Related Videos

    Kartel’s conviction was overturned in March 2024 due to juror misconduct, and he was released last year. Since then, the 49-year-old has earned a Grammy nomination, embarked on a world tour and released a steady stream of new music.

    For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.

    Get breaking National news

    For news impacting Canada and around the world, sign up for breaking news alerts delivered directly to you when they happen.

    Drake has long credited Kartel as one of his biggest influences, referencing him in interviews and on social media. Drake invited Kartel to join him on stage at London’s Wireless Festival over the summer, and their collaboration continued on Canadian soil Sunday.

    Story continues below advertisement

    The crowd thundered when Kartel took the stage to his remix of Akon’s 2004 hit “Locked Up,” wielding a baseball bat and wearing a powder-blue Blue Jays jersey with “Worl’ Boss” — one of his nicknames — stitched on the back.

    “Canada, we’re here!” he declared. “Yo, big up Blue Jays.”

    Despite pushing 50 and battling Graves’ disease, Kartel’s energy was turned to 11 for the entire show. Pumping his knees and bounding down the stage like a one-man parade, he unleashed hits including “Romping Shop,” “It Bend Like Banana” and “Go Go Wine,” the audience gyrating and belting along to every word.


    At one point, Kartel became emotional while recounting landing in Toronto earlier in the day.

    “I tell you, tears came to my eyes because I’ve never been here before and I know the people want to see me,” he shared.

    “I literally cried. Me, a grown-ass man. I said God is the greatest.”

    Several attendees said they never thought they’d see the day Kartel performed in Canada.

    Daniella Mcleary said she’s been listening to the dancehall star since “before I was old enough to be listening to him,” and scrambled to get tickets when the shows were announced.

    Story continues below advertisement

    “I think everyone that’s Caribbean was trying to get here today. Toronto has such a big Caribbean community, especially Jamaican, so we’re all going to come together and vibe,” she says.

    “He could have sold out the Rogers Centre, too, easily.”

    Brittney Sinclair, who was born in Jamaica, says Kartel is embedded in Caribbean culture.

    “I view him as a national hero, and I think it’s a miracle he’s here today,” she says, noting that it’s all the more remarkable given his time behind bars.

    Sharda Persaud says she’s been waiting for Kartel to play Canada for as long as she can remember.

    “I feel like every memory in high school goes back to a Kartel song,” she says.

    “His music also instantly transports me to Caribana. It’s everything.”

    Sherry Singh credits “Romping Shop” for bringing her and her partner together.

    “It was playing at a club and it led to some good loving,” she laughs. “15 years later, we’re still grinding to it.”

    Still, she believes dancehall has been overlooked by the Canadian mainstream, despite its importance to the Caribbean community.

    Story continues below advertisement

    “To see Vybz here, on our home turf, means a lot,” she says.

    “This is a good first step, but we need to see more.”

    This report by The Canadian Press was first published Oct. 27, 2025

    &copy 2025 The Canadian Press

    [ad_2]

    Globalnews Digital

    Source link

  • ‘Song Sung Blue’ Review: Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson Bring Sparkling Chemistry and Impressive Musicality to Disarming Boomer Love Story

    [ad_1]

    A sweet serve of feel-sad, feel-glad corn done right, Song Sung Blue tells the remarkable true story of a Milwaukee auto mechanic and his hairdresser wife who face hard knocks together but never let their dream die — even if it’s on life support during the toughest times. While that might sound like Hallmark treacle, Craig Brewer’s captivating retelling of the triumphs and tribulations of a Neil Diamond tribute act is grounded in real feeling and irresistibly rousing music. Most of all, it’s held aloft by winning performances from an ideally paired Hugh Jackman and Kate Hudson, the latter doing her best work since Almost Famous.

    I’ll confess I was an easy mark for this movie. A key childhood memory is sitting on my aunt’s living room floor — she was groovy enough to have a “feature wall” of contrast wallpaper — playing the Hot August Night double album from start to finish while everyone else was outside digesting barbecue. By the time I hit high school, Diamond’s music had been deemed uncool, so naturally, I disavowed any fondness for it. But decades later, his songs became a time-travel vehicle; I was surprised to find I knew just about every word. I guess it was a given that Song Sung Blue would win me over.

    Song Sung Blue

    The Bottom Line

    A diamond in the rough.

    Venue: AFI Fest (Closing Night)
    Release date: Thursday, Dec. 25
    Cast: Hugh Jackman, Kate Hudson, Michael Imperioli, Ella Anderson, Fisher Stevens, Jim Belushi, King Princess, Mustafa Shakir, Hudson Hensley, John Beckwith
    Director-screenwriter: Craig Brewer, based on the documentary by Greg Kohs

    Rated PG-13,
    2 hours 11 minutes

    There’s no denying that this is a bona fide boomer movie, so it prompts questions as to whether that generation can still be nudged toward the multiplex and whether younger audiences will be even remotely curious. But this is the kind of robust entertainment — wholesome though not at all toothless, alternately joyful and heart-wrenching — that doesn’t get made much anymore, which should boost word of mouth for the Focus Features Christmas release. It’s a family movie in the best sense of the term, a crowd-pleaser with a ton of heart.

    Jackman plays Mike Sardina, a divorced Vietnam vet marking his 20th anniversary of sobriety in the late ‘80s when he meets Claire Stengl (Hudson) at a “Legends” gig at the Wisconsin State Fair. The bill includes impersonators doing Elvis, Willie Nelson, Streisand, James Brown and Buddy Holly, the latter the specialty of Michael Imperioli’s Mark Shurilla, who is also the show’s promoter.

    Mike, who performs as self-styled rock god “Lightning,” backs out after a disagreement with Mark, but not before exchanging some flirty banter with Claire. Just as she’s about to go on as Patsy Cline, she tells him he should be doing Neil Diamond.

    From Hustle & Flow through the brilliant Eddie Murphy vehicle Dolemite Is My Name, writer-director Brewer has shown an affinity for underdogs seeking fulfillment as performers. It’s obvious what drew him to Greg Kohs’ 2008 documentary of the same name about the husband-and-wife duo. Brewer is working in a more conventional style here than some of his earlier films, but there’s sincerity and emotional authenticity to this movie that suggest deep personal investment, not to mention hardcore music fandom.

    Composer Scott Bomar serves as executive music producer, and song after song is an uplifting knockout. Naturally, “Sweet Caroline” gets the royal treatment, but just as Mike insists there’s much more to Neil Diamond than that over-saturated, infernally catchy hit and its singalong chorus, so too does the movie cast a wide net over Diamond’s vast catalogue.

    Some of the more memorable numbers are the romantic ballad “Play Me,” the spiritual “Soolaimon,” the stirring, gospel-inflected “Holly Holy” and the even more roof-raising “Brother Love’s Traveling Salvation Show.” Unlike so many music biopics that shuffle frustrating song fragments just to get through all the greatest hits, Brewer gives the songs space to play out at length, editor Billy Fox’s many montages serving both to amplify and advance the narrative.

    This approach is evident from the first time Mike visits Claire with an album of Neil Diamond sheet music to kick around ideas for his act. By the time that first session is over, he has asked her to be Thunder to his Lightning and the pair have surrendered to their mutual attraction. The chemistry between Jackman and Hudson makes you root for their characters as a couple and as a music act.

    Scenes that by rights should be eye-rolling clichés somehow end up disarming. One is the first full rehearsal in Mike’s garage, with his longtime associates The Esquires on horns and keys, and Mark on guitar, after deciding he’s too old to keep impersonating Buddy Holly, who died at 22. They rip through “Crunchy Granola Suite” with such gusto, Mike and Claire sharing vocal duties, that even the crabby neighbor across the street is dancing while watering her lawn.

    Claire is also a refugee from a broken marriage, prone to bouts of depression, but singing is a great mood-elevator, as is Mike. Her tween son Dayna (Hudson Hensley) is easily won over by his new stepdad, while teenage daughter Rachel (Ella Anderson) is more resistant. But she also comes around after forming a fast friendship and sharing a joint with Mike’s daughter Angelina (indie musician King Princess), visiting from Florida where she lives with her mother.

    Mike’s dentist, Dr. Dave Watson (Fisher Stevens), who doubles as his manager, hooks the duo up with low-rent casino booker Tom D’Amato (an amusingly cartoonish Jim Belushi). He screws up their first important gig by promising a motorhome-convention audience and delivering a biker club, who are strictly ZZ Top. But out of that wreckage comes a marriage proposal and before long, Lightning and Thunder are a Milwaukee sensation, getting local news coverage and an enthusiastic following.

    Their big break comes when Eddie Vedder (John Beckwith) calls, asking them to open for Pearl Jam. (Yes, this really happened!) But just when you might be starting to wonder if there will be any significant conflict, tragedy strikes, sidelining Claire and sending her plummeting into severe depression and anger. Mike tries to make the best of things, hosting karaoke nights at a family-run Thai restaurant where the owner (Shyaporn Theerakulstit) is a massive Neil Diamond fan. But without Claire, performing loses its magic for him.

    The repeat misfortunes in these characters’ lives stir in resonant notes of pathos, even if some, like Rachel’s unplanned pregnancy, are given minimal airtime. But the movie keeps you on board through spiraling lows and resilient highs — even through three endings when one would have sufficed — in large part because the leads are just so damned charming.

    Jackman is no stranger to this kind of showman dreamer. His exuberant personality and natural humor make him an ideal fit for the performance elements, whether singing “Cracklin’ Rosie” in his underwear while practicing his Neil moves or belting out hits onstage in dagger-collared satin ‘70s shirts and sequined jackets, his hair billowing in the gust of a fan. But the actor doesn’t shortchange the soulfulness of his character either.

    The real surprise, however, is Hudson, giving a vanity-free performance that makes her entirely believable as a Midwestern hairdresser and loving mother whose happiness when performing is infectious and her devastation heartbreaking.

    Her versions of Patsy Cline evergreens “Walkin’ After Midnight” and “Sweet Dreams” are rich and warm and full-bodied. She also matches Jackman note for note in wonderful performance interludes, in which Mike and Claire’s love radiates over the audience, and she soars in a solo on Diamond’s soft rock ballad “I’ve Been This Way Before.”

    Imperioli, Anderson, Stevens and Belushi ably lead the appealing ensemble in a film that’s sugary but never sickly, even when it borders on schmaltz. Brewer’s direction is polished and fuss-free, trusting in the strength of the characters and their stranger-than-fiction story to do the work, always anchored in bittersweet real-life experience.

    [ad_2]

    David Rooney

    Source link

  • Greek singer-songwriter Dionysis Savvopoulos buried in a state funeral

    [ad_1]

    ATHENS, Greece (AP) — Popular Greek singer-songwriter Dionysis Savvopoulos was buried Saturday at Athens’ First Cemetery in a state-sponsored funeral, four days after his death at age 80.

    Savvopoulos had died of a heart attack after battling cancer since 2020.

    Thousands came to pay their respects to a well-beloved, if sometimes controversial, artist as he lay in state at a chapel of the Athens Metropolitan Cathedral Saturday morning. Hundreds made the nearly 2-kilometer (1.2-mile) walk behind the hearse to the cemetery.

    The presence of a Greek navy band playing mournful music was indicative of the change in Savvopoulos’s status, from someone lionized by anarchist-leaning leftists in the 1960s and 1970s and dismissed by the establishment as a long-haired freak, to a figure embraced by the same establishment and cultural mainstream.

    Savvopoulos never changed his musical style — a blend of rock, folk-rock, jazz and Greek popular music — to conform to mainstream tastes. Always a political animal, he didn’t shy away from criticizing the left and its illusions, especially on his 1989 album “The Haircut,” whose sleeve showed him beardless with long locks. A few of his songs drew the enmity of some of his longtime admirers. The beard grew back but his politics remained moderate.

    Conservative Prime Minister Kyriakos Mitsotakis, the first of many who eulogized Savvopoulos during the funeral service, used the lyrics of the 1972 song “Messenger Angel” to portray the artist as a speaker of uncomfortable truths that many did not want to hear. “If he had no pleasant news to tell/better tell us none,” he quoted the song’s ending.

    Others who joined in eulogizing Savvopoulos were former President Katerina Sakellaropoulou, fellow musicians, artists and literary figures, some from his hometown of Thessaloniki, and one of his two grandsons.

    [ad_2]

    Source link

  • Bad Bunny didn’t miss the Billboard Latin Music Awards, he was the top winner

    [ad_1]

    MIAMI (AP) — His presence had remained a mystery, but Bad Bunny was there in person Thursday night to receive all the 2025 Billboard Latin Music Awards that were given to him, including the special Billboard Top Latin Artist of the 21st Century Award.

    Puerto Rican star Rita Moreno presented him with the accolade, and flirtatiously noted that the reggaeton singer is “good” and “whole.” Then, in a more serious tone, she told him that she identified with him.

    “Today I see an artist who takes the whole world,” Moreno said of Bad Bunny. “That same strength, that same passion, that helped me to never give up.”

    Taking the stage to his song “BAILE INoLVIDABLE,” Bad Bunny, 31, danced a bit of salsa with Moreno, 93.

    “Thank you very much, you are whole too,” he told the Oscar- and Tony-winning actress. “It is an honor for me to receive this award from her hands.”

    “Every time I hear other artists express themselves in that way of me, it gives me the security of being me and doing the things I do with my heart,” he added.

    Bad Bunny was announced as winner of the Billboard Top Latin Artist of the 21st Century Award but didn’t show up at the red carpet. He had previously skipped other major ceremonies so this presence remained a mystery that ended when he showed up at the beginning of the night to pick up the Top Latin Album of the Year.

    Bad Bunny had broken a record by being a finalist for 27 categories of the Latin Billboards 2025, and became the top winner of the night with 11 awards, including artist of the year; Global 200 Latin Artist of the Year, and “Hot Latin Songs” Male Artist of the Year.

    “I am grateful for these awards, but at the same time I recognize that, just as I deserve it, Rauw, Fuerza Regida, Peso, Karol could win it. I think we are all doing something incredible in music; our music is reaching more and more places,” he said upon receiving the artist of the year award from Olga Tañón. “I think it’s a job that we’re all doing, and that we’re continuing what other artists have been doing for years.”

    Bad Bunny’s hit “DtMF” won three awards, including streaming song of the year. His album “DeBÍ TiRAR MáS FOToS” was recognized as Top Latin Album of the year.

    Laura Pausini and Karol G shine

    Karol G was the biggest female winner of the awards broadcast live on Telemundo from the James L. Knight Center in Miami, receiving six awards, including Hot Latin Songs female artist of the year. Her song “Si antes te hubiera conocido” swept for four awards: Global 200 Latin Song of the Year; Latin Airplay Song of the Year; Sales Song of the Year and Tropical Song of the Year.

    “We had an incredible time when we made this song in the studio; That day there was magic, energy. God was in that place,” said Karol G upon receiving the Global 200 Latin Song of the Year award.

    Fuerza Regida won five awards, including Regional Mexican Artist of the Year, Duo or Group. Their hit “Tu boda” with Óscar Maydon was recognized as Regional Mexican Song of the Year, and Hot Latin Song of the Year, Vocal Event. Netón Vega was awarded as the debut artist of the year.

    Laura Pausini received the Billboard Icon Award for her outstanding international career and performed a moving version of “Mi historia entre tus dedos”, originally released in 1995 by Gianluca Grignani.

    “It’s amazing for me to be a part of the history of Latin music,” Pausini said. “I’m going to do something I’ve never done, I’m going to thank this Laura, the hard-working one, the one who is rude, who hasn’t given up when they’ve said no — which have been many times, by the way — who has followed my path honestly,” added pointing towards herself.

    Daddy Yankee returns

    In his long-awaited return to the stage, Daddy Yankee premiered “Sonríele” worldwide. At the end of his presentation, he said that he had a new mission.

    “To tell the world that Jesus is the way, the truth and the life,” he said.

    Peso Pluma was surprised to see that his girlfriend, Kenia Os, would present him with the Billboard Vanguard Award for his innovation and contribution to the growth of Mexican music globally. As soon as she went on stage, the couple gave each other a passionate kiss.

    “This is a crossroads; I didn’t know she was going to give it to me,” he said. “I’m so glad you gave it to me love… this beautiful woman who has made me a better human being, a better boyfriend, a better boss; a better everything.”

    Later, Peso Pluma performed “Apaga la Luz” live.

    Elvis Crespo dedicated his Billboard Hall of Fame Award to his “first female manager.”

    “It was my mother, Irene, who gave me 5 dollars to take my singing lessons every Friday in Río Piedras,” he said. “Irene, this is for you.”

    The Puerto Rican star also thanked his father and his children and ended with an emotional message about music: “I heard somewhere that in the music industry you don’t make friends. That’s a lie, you make friends for life.”

    Shakira won three awards: Tour of the Year; Latin Pop Artist of the Year, Solo, and Latin Pop Song of the Year “Soltera.”

    Óscar Maydon, Netón Vega, Aventura, Baby Rasta & Gringo, Benny Blanco, Elvis Crespo, Kapo, Maná, Romeo Santos, Rubby Pérez and Tito Double P were other winners of the night.

    Olga Tañón kicked off the ceremony with an energetic interpretation of “El Jolgorio”. There were also memorable performances by Beéle, Danny Ocean, Grupo Frontera, Juan Duque, La Arrolladora Banda El Limón de René Camacho, NXNNI and Ozuna.

    Carlos Vives, Emilia, Wisin and Xavi performed “Somos más”, Telemundo’s official anthem for the 2026 FIFA World Cup.

    [ad_2]

    Source link