Tuesday, September 30, 2014

Watch Alabama Make a 'Tennessee River' Run With Jason Aldean — Video Premiere

Last November, Alabama gathered some of their most famous friends and hit up Nashville's Ryman Auditorium for a sold-out, guest-heavy performance. That concert, which featured collaborations with everyone from Trisha Yearwood to Jamey Johnson, hits stores today in the form of Alabama & Friends at the Ryman, a DVD and double-disc record that marks Alabama's first live album in more than two decades.



The album kicks off with a live performance of the band's 1984 chart-topper, "If You're Gonna Play in Texas (You Gotta Have a Fiddle in the Band)," before moving into the first duet of the evening: a fiery, tag-teamed version of "Tennessee River," featuring Jason Aldean on guest vocals and acoustic guitar. "This man is killing the world in country music right now!" Randy Houser tells the crowd by way of introduction, happily welcoming to the stage a country crooner whose current popularity — including 12 Top 10 singles and five platinum-selling albums — brings to mind the success Alabama enjoyed during the Eighties. [Watch the performance above.]


"Jason seems to enjoy music the way we do," guitarist Jeff Cook tells Rolling Stone Country. "In today's music market, it is sometimes difficult to sort out the good country from the bad rock and roll. I believe he leaves a positive stamp on country music."


Several months before the Ryman show, Aldean recorded a studio version of "Tennessee River" with his own band. The song was released in August 2013 as the leadoff track from Alabama & Friends, a tribute album that cracked the Top 10 on the country and pop charts. Florida Georgia Line, Luke Bryan and Eli Young Band — all of whom make appearances on the live album — also contributed to the disc.


This year, the boys in Alabama celebrate their 45th anniversary together. Still, playing a place like the Ryman — the former home of the Grand Ole Opry, as well as one of the most historic venues in all of country music — continues to floor them.


"It's feels special to me to be able to stand there on the stage where so much musical history took place, and to be accepted as good enough to play there," Cook reflects. "It really is the mother church of country music."







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1vsFpm7

via Christopher Sabec Music

See Rancid Play Three Punky Ragers From New Album

Rancid didn't merely announce that they were putting out their eighth studio record this fall; they made a sampler video. To accompany the news that ...Honor Is All We Know would be coming out on October 27th, the long-running punk quartet filmed themselves playing three songs from the record: "Collision Course," "Honor Is All We Know" and "Evil's My Friend," which are all sequenced one right after the other. In a post on Facebook, the band promised it would be releasing more music from the album.



The Bay Area punks recorded the album, which follows up their 2009 LP Let the Dominoes Fall, with Bad Religion guitarist Brett Gurewitz producing. "It's been six years since our last record," the band wrote in a joint statement. "Thank you guys for being patient."


Between Let the Dominoes Fall and now, Rancid singer and guitarist Tim Armstrong has been especially busy with other projects. In 2011, he launched a musical theater series for the web called Tim Timebomb's RockNRoll Theater. The debut episode featured AFI frontman Davey Havok and Rancid guitarist Lars Frederiksen. Two years later, Armstrong released a new record – In a Warzone – by another band he fronts, the Transplants. The group, which also features Blink-182 drummer Travis Barker, premiered the album on RollingStone.com. Rancid finally reported that they were in the studio in February 2013.


...Honor Is All We Know Track List:


1. "Back Where I Belong"

2. "Raise Your Fist"

3. "Collision Course"

4. "Evil's My Friend"

5. "Honor Is All We Know"

6. "A Power Inside"

7. "In The Streets"

8. "Face Up"

9. "Already Dead"

10. "Diabolical"

11. "Malfunction"

12. "Now We're Through With You"

13. "Everybody's Sufferin'"

14. "Grave Digger"







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1qSAlTq

via Christopher Sabec Music

Neil Diamond Spreads Love the Brooklyn Way

It's hard to believe Neil Diamond had never played a show on his native soil of Brooklyn before last night. But he returned to the old neighborhood for a surprise secret gig at his alma mater Erasmus Hall High School, deep in the heart of Flatbush. It was an emotional homecoming on a (surprisingly) hot September night. Seeing Neil Diamond sing "Brooklyn Roads" at his first-ever Brooklyn gig was as hardcore as seeing the Beastie Boys do "Hello Brooklyn" at their first show in the borough, back at McCarren Pool in 2007.



Neil was clearly in sentimental mode, telling stories about the old days and busting his arena-size moves in the high-school chapel where he used to get sent for detention. "The memories are flooding in tonight," he said before playing "Brooklyn Roads." "I drive people crazy when I come back here because I remember every building. I used to shine shoes at that subway station. It was a great gig — no future in it, but a great gig for a kid."


Well, as the gangsters say, he don't shine shoes no more. Looking dapper in a dark suit and his new silver-fox beard, the Jewish Elvis put on a mega-energy 10-song show for a few hundred lucky fans — most of whom had waited in line all day in hopes of getting in — with the stained-glass window behind him turning the place into his personal shrine. And he crackled every Rosie in the room.


Diamond has always celebrated his Flatbush roots — during previous New York stops, he's been spotted walking the streets by day, riding the subway incognito, just a solitary man and his memories. (At Madison Square Garden a few years ago, he boasted, "I was from Brooklyn before it was hip.") "It was in this chapel I decided to take piano lessons," he told the crowd last night. "I sang in the chorus for two years. Why? Because I thought it was a great place to meet girls." He also pointed out the balcony where he sat for the Adlai Stevenson rally in 1956.


Erasmus Hall has other famous alumni whose portraits hang in the chapel, like Donny Most '70 (he played Ralph Malph on Happy Days) and Barbra Streisand '59. (Her framed yearbook photo was on the wall right next to me, which made me feel like her prom date. How lucky can you get?) Some fans had wild hopes she'd show up for "You Don't Bring Me Flowers" — but she was there in spirit, when he gave a shout-out to "my friend Barbra Streisand" as a fellow chorus alum.


As always with a Neil Diamond show, the crowd was out for blood — it was a wildly enthusiastic mix of Erasmus Hall students and silver-haired Neil fanatics. I met a lady who drove two hours from Hyde Park as soon as the news about this gig broke — she told me proudly she hasn't missed a Neil show on the East Coast since he played Long Island in 1973. "I jumped in the car and left the sink full of dishes," she said, twirling her cane. Before the show even began, these fans were up dancing to the pre-show loop of Neil hits. (How bad-ass is it to blast "Forever in Blue Jeans" over the speakers right before you come out to sing it? Very.)


The man's voice was in studly shape, like the rest of him. Backed by a stripped-down version of his arena band, he went hard on classics like "Solitary Man" and "Love on the Rocks." (He did not do "Play Me," possibly because memories of his old English teachers made him reluctant to utter the lines, "Songs she sang to me/Songs she brang to me.") This is still the man whose classic live album Hot August Night had this liner note from the artist: "The stage, she is the God-damnedest woman you ever saw."


He debuted a pair of choice cuts from his forthcoming Melody Road. "I love doing songs you know," he told the crowd. "But I really love doing the songs you haven't heard before — because those are the ones I get to sing alone." (You have to admit — that's a brilliant way to break the delicate news you're trying out unfamiliar material.) And the new songs are top notch: "Nothing But a Heartache" is a bluesy stomp, while "Something Blue" has a lighter country lilt that evokes another Neil song with "blue" in the title. Both went over big — when the fans are clapping on the beat by the second chorus, your new tune is officially a success.


Neil ended it all with an epic "Sweet Caroline," repeating chorus after chorus after chorus. Rough "so good" count: 33. (It was definitely strange to hear Brooklyn's finest perform "Sweet Caroline" here two days after Derek Jeter played his final game in Fenway Park.) Even the cops had their phones out. At one point, Neil accused some audience members of not singing. "You can't be students or Brooklynites," he said. "Are you from Staten Island? Sorry — there's the exit."


The show was over, but there were some touching moments still ahead, as fans began to notice the Streisand yearbook photo on the wall, crowding around to kvell and take selfies with it. Seeing Kyp Malone from the band TV on te Radio get out his phone for a shot of Barbra's high-school smile seemed to connect about six generations of Brooklyn rockness. It was a moment that only the love of Neil could make happen.


Set List:

"I'm a Believer"

"Solitary Man"

"Kentucky Woman"

"Brooklyn Roads"

"Love on the Rocks"

"Forever in Blue Jeans"

"Cracklin' Rosie"

"Nothing But a Heartache"

"Something Blue"

"Sweet Caroline"







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1poJsvR

via Christopher Sabec Music

Sons of Bill Lose Themselves in the 'Cosmos' — Video Premiere

Spend 30 minutes or so with Sons of Bill — say, in the conference room of the BMI building in Nashville, hours before the band is due to kick off an international tour with a show at the Americana Music Festival — and you'll be thrown into a conversation that moves multiple miles a minute, jumping between topics such as Wilco, Slayer, The Sound and the Fury's Quentin Compson and Big Star's Chris Bell. Led by three Virginia-bred brothers, Sons of Bill is the sort of family band whose sheer energy makes everyone want to be part of the clan… as long as you can keep up.



You can't blame the guys for moving fast. After taking the entire summer to rest and recoup after nearly a decade's worth of touring, Sons of Bill are back with a new album, Love & Logic. It's a classic roots-rock record for the modern age, filled with B3 organ, acoustic guitar, envelope-pushing arrangements and the sound of three siblings whose voices were born to mesh. Ken Coomer, who co-founded Wilco in the mid-Nineties before refashioning himself as a producer for artists like Will Hoge, recorded the album in his Nashville studio.


"Ken knew about the hangups that can happen when you have a band with multiple songwriters," says James Wilson, who shares frontman duties with his brothers Abe and Sam. "He'd been in a band that had gone through some serious growing pains and transformations. Just look at the difference between Being There and Summerteeth. It's huge. We wanted to push ourselves to grow like that, and Ken helped us negotiate the way."


One of the album's highlights is "Lost in the Cosmos (Song for Chris Bell)," a slow-burning power ballad written for the Big Star musician. Abe Wilson took three years to finish the song, slowly chipping away at a tune that examines the challenges of being an artist in a world that doesn't always reward the artistic lifestyle. [Watch the song's music video, shot in the band's hometown of Charlottesville, Virginia, above.]


"James and I were listening to a lot of Big Star," Abe remembers," and we decided that Chris Bell really needed a song of his own. The Replacements have already given Alex Chilton a song, but Chris needed some love, too."


Like the rest of love Love & Logic, "Lost in the Cosmos (Song for Chris Bell)" moves between the foundations of roots music — pedal steel, strummed acoustics and triple-stacked harmonies colored by Virginia accents — and a swooning, sweeping sound that owes more to Pink Floyd's space-rock than anything else. The rest of the album stays somewhere between those wide goal posts.


"This feels less like a rebirth for the band, and more like an arrival," says Sam, whose guitar solo gives "Lost in the Comos" a jolt of energy during its second half. "You never want to make the same record twice. With this one, we were all on the same page from day one… and we're happy with where it took us."


The final three months of 2014 will take Sons of Bill across most of the western world, with their current cross-country tour giving way to some U.K. dates after Christmas.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1mLWtnp

via Christopher Sabec Music

Lady Antebellum Talk Flying Out of Comfort Zone for New Album '747'

Lady Antebellum's 747 touches down today, bringing with it a big, booming sound that owes more to "Downtown," the group's funky-tonk single from last year's Golden, than blockbuster ballads like "Need You Now." Written on the road and recorded during breaks in the band's 2014 headlining tour, it's an album that feels a lot like a live show. That means less strings, more electric guitars and plenty of triple-stacked harmonies, with a focus on tunes that aim for the feet as well as the heart.



Dave Haywood, Charles Kelley and Hilary Scott sat down with Rolling Stone Country earlier this fall, days before Haywood's wife gave birth to the couple's first child, to talk about the record, the tour and the challenge of reinventing yourself in the spotlight.


When you began writing some of these songs, were you scared that they were too much of a departure from your usual sound?

Kelley: One thing we've learned — and it's been proven to us over the past couple of years — is that when we do take chances, the fans have responded really well. "Downtown" was our first really off-the-wall song, and "Bartender" is much more danceable than what people are used to from us. That was exactly what we needed. We'd fallen into a very similar style, that mid-tempo thing with some melancholy to it. With this record, we wanted to try different things and make it really in your face.


Scott: We always knew we could reel ourselves back in, so why not just go for it and explore every avenue, every option, while we're in the studio? We can always pull back. A lot of times, we went that extra mile and didn't have to pull back, because we got there and realized, "Oh, this is totally another part of who we are. This is awesome."


Kelley: We need to evolve. Recently, the songs that have been the biggest successes have been left-of-center for us.


Dave, you started writing a lot of these songs in your home studio. Did they sound different from the very start, when they were just demos?

Haywood: Starting to write with a little bit of a different track can steer your music in a different direction. We usually just write with an acoustic guitar or a piano, but when you do that, it's probably gonna end up in a similar spot as some other songs. That's just the nature of those instruments. This time, by creating some fully prepared tracks with drums and bass and guitars, we could push ourselves to write in a live mindset. An upbeat mindset.


Scott: There's something cool about listening to a track, and it's just a distorted guitar riff… it takes you to a whole new place. It opens up your mind, lyrically and melodically, in ways that a piano or an acoustic guitar can't. All those intangibles help bring something new out of you.


What made "Hey Bartender" the best option for a leadoff single?

Kelley: We sent some of our songs to the label, and we were surprised that they gravitated toward "Bartender" so much. I think they'd been feeling that our last couple records had been a little heavy. They wanted us to get back a little bit to some of the sound from that first record, with songs like "Love Don't Live Here" and "Lookin' for a Good Time." That fun, youthful energy. I think we did get into a bit of a melancholy thing for a while, and that's not really how our live show is. It's not how we are. When we started about thinking what could really set off the tone of the record, "Bartender" seemed like something fresh. It was such a danceable song. We needed that for our live show, too — a spot for Hilary to have more moments like "Downtown."


The album is almost out, but the tour is nearly over, too. Are there plans for more shows in 2015?

Scott : Right now, we're just in the brainstorming process of what the next tour could be, with all these new songs. That's one of the most exciting things. We can sit around a table and talk about how we can continue to make our live show better.


Haywood: That's how we want to make our living for 20 years: out there on the road. It's a big focus for us. We change the setlist almost every night, trying to find the perfect setlist for the perfect crowd. That's always been a priority.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1rCicOO

via Christopher Sabec Music

Monday, September 29, 2014

Hear Carrie Underwood's Spiritual New Single 'Something in the Water'

Carrie Underwood is once again wearing her faith on her musical sleeve.



It's been nine years since the country superstar released "Jesus, Take the Wheel," the Grammy-winning, double-platinum-selling song that spent six weeks at Number One. Back then, she was fresh off her American Idol win and the new toast of Nashville. Fast forward to today, and she's the top-earning Idol alum of all time, according to Forbes, and is kicking off her first greatest hits compilation with another spiritual heartstring-tugger.


"Something in the Water," which Underwood co-wrote with Chris DeStefano and Brett James, is a new track off the Oklahoma native's upcoming Greatest Hits: Decade #1 album. It's a "joyous, uplifting song about changing your life for the better and waking up and having that a-ha moment and your life being different from that moment forward," the singer explained last week on NBC's Today show. Similar to "Jesus, Take the Wheel," the new song is about turning to God in troubled times.


"I followed that preacher man down to the river/And now I'm changed/And now I'm stronger/There must've been something in the water," Underwood sings in the soaring song that showcases her heavenly high vocal range. (Listen above.)


Greatest Hits: Decade #1 will also include Underwood's 18 Number One singles from her decade-long career. It is set to hit stores December 9th.


Pregnant with her first child, due in spring, Underwood has cleared her tour schedule for the rest of this year. She played the Global Citizen Festival in New York's Central Park last week, raising money and awareness for impoverished communities alongside Sting, Beyonce, No Doubt and a long list of other musical heavy hitters.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1vpvkby

via Christopher Sabec Music

Black Sabbath to Record New Album, Plan Final Tour

Following the global success of their most recent album 13, which debuted at Number One in the United States and several other countries, Black Sabbath have decided to record another album. Ozzy Osbourne told Metal Hammer that he hoped to begin the writing sessions with guitarist Tony Iommi and bassist Geezer Butler in early 2015. "We're going to do one more album, and a final tour," he said.



Osbourne reported that the experience of making and touring around 13 was positive all around and that the band left things off on friendly terms after their tour earlier this year. "Once the dust settled after the last tour we started discussing the idea – because we were getting asked about it all the time – I said to Sharon, 'What's going on? Because if there's no more Sabbath I want to get on with my own thing again,' and she came back and said 'Let me look into it,'" Osbourne told the magazine.


"Three weeks later, I asked her about it again, and she said 'Oh, I still have to talk to so and so...' And I said, 'Sharon, I ain't fucking 21 anymore. If we're going to do [it], I want to do it before I'm 70. Time isn't on our side.' So she made the call and came back and said, 'Yeah, the record company wants another album.' I believe Rick Rubin is going to do it with us again."


Pressed for a timeline, Osbourne estimated it would be "sooner rather than later." "Obviously a lot of it is coming down to Tony's health, he's obviously got his cancer treatment, but we'll get onto it next year," he said. "I don't know if we'll be writing in England or L.A., but I'll fly to the fucking moon for it if I have to."


In January, Osbourne told Rolling Stone that he was "down" to do another Sabbath LP, saying, "it's now or never." Iommi rejoined, "Absolutely." At the time, the guitarist reported that he was "feeling OK" from his treatments for lymphoma, which was discovered early in the making of 13.


In the meantime, Osbourne is readying the release of solo CD and DVD releases both titled Memoirs of a Madman. The album collects many of the singer's biggest hits, while the two-disc DVD compiles his music videos and a bevy of previously unreleased live performances. Last week, Osbourne released video of his bandmates from various points in his solo career, including guitarists Zakk Wylde and Gus G, sharing stories about how he impacted their lives.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1BvCdrx

via Christopher Sabec Music

Friday, September 26, 2014

R.E.M. Plot Release of Six-Disc DVD Set 'REMTV'

R.E.M. may have broken up, but 2014 has become a very fruitful year for the band, which has just announced another box set. The six-disc DVD box set REMTV collects decades of television appearances, featuring footage of performances culled from concerts, award shows, their Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction and general TV appearances from between 1983 and 2007. It contains both of the band's MTV Unplugged appearances from 1991 and 2001 – which was released on CD earlier this year as Unplugged: The Complete 1991 And 2001 Sessions – and the band's VH1 Storytellers show from 1998, all of which contain previously unreleased outtakes.



The band has dedicated three discs to live performances from the mid-Nineties to the late 2000s, including two free concerts that were filmed for broadcast in Cologne in 2001 and in Athens, Greece in 2008. Both shows appear in their entirety in the box set and contain more than a dozen previously unaired songs.


The box also contains a feature-length documentary about the band – R.E.M. by MTV – which traces the evolutions of both the group and the network together.


REMTV is due out November 24th, but is available for pre-order on the band's website. Pre-orders include an instant-gratification download of the group's MTV Sonic performance in Milan from 2001.


Earlier this year, the group put out two box sets comprising rarities from both its early days on I.R.S. Records in the Eighties and from the rest of its career on Warner Bros. Between the two sets, the band offered up more than 150 hard-to-find recordings.


REMTV Track List


Disc One


UNPLUGGED 1991

(04/10/91)


"Half a World Away"

"Disturbance at the Heron House"

"Radio Song"

"Low"

"Perfect Circle"

"Fall on Me"

"Belong"

"Love Is All Around"

"It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"

"Losing My Religion"

"Pop Song 89"

"Endgame"


OUTTAKES 1991


"Fretless"

"Swan Swan H"

"Rotary Eleven"

"Get Up"

"World Leader Pretend"


UNPLUGGED 2001

(05/21/01)


"All the Way to Reno (You're Gonna Be a Star)" *

"Electrolite"

"At My Most Beautiful"

"Daysleeper"

"So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)"

"Losing My Religion"

"Country Feedback"

"Cuyahoga"

"Imitation of Life"

"Find the River"


OUTTAKES 2001


"The One I Love"

"Disappear"

"Beat a Drum"

"I've Been High"

"I'll Take the Rain"

"Sad Professor"

"The Great Beyond"


Disc Two


VH1 STORYTELLERS

(10/23/98)


"Electrolite"

"Daysleeper"

"Losing My Religion"

"Perfect Circle"

"Sad Professor"

"Fall on Me"

"I'm Not Over You"

"The Apologist"

"Man on the Moon"


STORYTELLERS – OUTTAKES


"New Test Leper"

"Parakeet"

"(Don't Go Back To) Rockville"

"Suspicion"

"Walk Unafraid"

"At My Most Beautiful"


THE CUTTING EDGE

(06/14/84)


"(Don't Go Back to) Rockville"

"Driver 8"

"Wendell Gee"

"Smokin' in the Boys Room"

"Time After Time (Annelise)"

"Driver 8"


LIVEWIRE

(10/30/83)


"So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)"

"Carnival of Sorts (Box Cars)"


MTV 10th ANNIVERSARY SPECIAL

(11/10/91)

Featuring members of the Atlanta Symphony Orchestra


"Losing My Religion"


VIDEO MUSIC AWARDS 1993

(09/02/93)

Including Brian Harris and Duane Saetveit


"Everybody Hurts"

"Drive"


VIDEO MUSIC AWARDS 1995

(09/07/95)


"The Wake-Up Bomb"


EUROPEAN MUSIC AWARDS 1998

(11/12/98)


"Daysleeper" *


EUROPEAN MUSIC AWARDS 2001

(11/08/01)


"Imitation of Life"


ROCK AND ROLL HALL OF FAME INDUCTION 2007

(03/12/07)


"Begin the Begin"

"Gardening at Night"

"Man on the Moon"


THE COLBERT REPORT

(04/02/08)


"Supernatural Superserious"


Disc Three


R.E.M. IN DALLAS

(09/19/95)


"I Took Your Name"

"What's the Frequency, Kenneth?"

"Crush With Eyeliner"


R.E.M. UPLINK AT BOWERY BALLROOM

(10/28/98)


"Losing My Religion"

"Lotus"

"Daysleeper"

"E-Bow the Letter"

"The Apologist"

"So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)"

"Walk Unafraid"

"Man on the Moon"

"Radio Free Europe"


LIVE IN COLOGNE

(05/12/01)


"All the Way to Reno (You're Gonna Be a Star)"

"The Lifting"

"Imitation of Life"

"The One I Love"

"She Just Wants to Be"

"Walk Unafraid"

"Losing My Religion"

"Man on the Moon"

"It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"


LIVE IN COLOGNE OUTTAKES


"What's the Frequency, Kenneth?"

"Cuyahoga"

"Electrolite"

"I've Been High"

"Find the River"

"I'll Take the Rain"

"At My Most Beautiful"

"So. Central Rain (I'm Sorry)"


Disc Four


R.E.M. AT THE TABERNACLE, LONDON

(03/02/99)


"Losing My Religion"

"Daysleeper"

"Walk Unafraid"

"Man on the Moon"

"What's the Frequency, Kenneth?"

"It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"


MTV SONIC MILAN

(05/02/01)


"Losing My Religion"

"The Great Beyond"

"What's the Frequency, Kenneth?"

"Daysleeper"

"All the Way to Reno (You're Gonna Be a Star)"

"The Lifting"

"I'll Take the Rain"

"I've Been High"

"Man on the Moon"

"She Just Wants to Be"

"Imitation of Life"


ROCK AM RING

(06/03/05)


"What's the Frequency, Kenneth?"

"Leaving New York"

"Imitation of Life"

"Electron Blue"

"Man on the Moon"


ROCK AM RING OUTTAKES


"I Took Your Name"

"Bad Day"

"Drive"

"The Outsiders"

"Leave"

"Me in Honey"

"Wanderlust"

"Everybody Hurts"

"Electrolite"

"Orange Crush"

"The One I Love"

"Walk Unafraid"

"Losing My Religion"

"Imitation of Life"

"The Great Beyond"

"Animal"

"I'm Gonna DJ"


Disc Five


LIVE AT ROLLING STONE, MILAN

(03/18/08)


"Living Well Is the Best Revenge"

"Drive"

"Accelerate"

"Hollow Man"

"Electrolite"

"Houston"

"Supernatural Superserious"

"Bad Day"

"Losing My Religion"

"I'm Gonna DJ"

"Horse to Water"

"Imitation of Life"

"Until the Day Is Done"

"Man on the Moon"


LIVE AT OXEGEN FESTIVAL

(07/12/08)


"What's the Frequency, Kenneth?"

"Drive"

"It's the End of the World as We Know It (And I Feel Fine)"

"Man-Sized Wreath"

"I'm Gonna DJ"

"Supernatural Superserious"

"Man on the Moon"


R.E.M. IN ATHENS, GREECE

(10/05/08)


"Living Well Is the Best Revenge"

"What's the Frequency, Kenneth?"

"Drive"

"Man-Sized Wreath"

"Bad Day"

"Electrolite"

"(Don't Go Back To) Rockville"

"The Great Beyond"

"The One I Love"

"Losing My Religion"

"Let Me In"

"Orange Crush"

"Imitation of Life"

"Supernatural Superserious"

"Man on the Moon"


Disc Six


R.E.M. BY MTV


DELETED SCENES


"Peter"

"Politics"

"Golf"

"The Hornblower Affair"

"The Year 2000"







from RollingStone.com: Music http://ift.tt/1rqECm6

via Christopher Sabec Music

Bluegrass Giant Mac Wiseman Looks Back on a Legendary Career

Mac Wiseman has a thing for the holidays. At his house, tucked away in a suburban neighborhood near Percy Priest Lake in Nashville, it could be December: There's a faux Christmas tree in the corner with colored lights, a plate of freshly baked cookies sitting on the old round table in the popcorn-ceilinged breakfast nook and a game show glowing in the background on mute, almost like a little ambient light for a morning spent opening presents.



Instead, it's warm and muggy, and Wiseman, 89, is sitting barefoot in his living room in a reclining chair with a pair of wire glasses, a pill box and a notebook resting on a tray table in front of him. But it's not just any notebook — this particular diary, the color of deep butterscotch, has been handed down from his mother along with 12 more like it, meticulously preserved and filled with the hand-written lyrics that inspired the bluegrass and country legend to create Songs From My Mother's Hand. They're his renditions of songs like "Answer to Weeping Willow," popularized by the Carter Family, and Grandpa Jones' "Old Rattler" that the elder Mrs. Wiseman would transcribe straight from the radio in the Twenties and Thirties, which the family would then sing at the very table now holding the sweet treats and some water bottles. This was well before these words — accurate or not — could simply be found through a Google search; well before music became ringtones, not something to soak in, absorb.


"I have a computer, but I don't know how to turn it on and off," Wiseman tells Rolling Stone Country, chuckling warmly. But it's not that Wiseman, who has played in the Foggy Mountain Boys with Earl Scruggs and Lester Flatt, jammed with Bob Dylan and released over 65 albums, doesn't understand what a threat this glowing device is to music. It's an impetus, in fact, for Songs From My Mother's Hand, to give a generation focused on the ephemeral a sense of our timeless sonic catalogs.


Wiseman, who will play the Grand Old Opry tonight, has a thing or two to tell Rolling Stone Country about the foibles of the record business, hotel nights with Dylan and why he is a little anxious to finally be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame next month. And why, Christmas or not, this is a time to celebrate where American music has been and where it's going.


The process of writing down songs straight from the radio as your mother did is so painstaking, so meticulous. These days, people can simply look up lyrics online, or download a song quickly and move on just as fast. Does this worry you?

Wiseman: Well, it's a double-edged sword. I’m glad the younger people are being exposed, especially on YouTube, but at the same time, I'm afraid a lot of us are being lost, that's why I’m trying to record some of the old songs. But it does bother me that they don't know the melodies of a lot of the originals.


It's odd, because on one hand, there is a folk resurgence, where the younger generation is obsessed with roots, in this catch-all genre of Americana. But most people don't know the origins of real American music, or what pure bluegrass or old time should really sound like, or know the difference between the two.

Wiseman: Well, you're exactly right. And so many of those songs were brought over from England, Scotland, Ireland and Germany and places like that. They've been revived in a lot of ways, interpreted different ways. People try to be too commercial rather than sticking to the original message, you see. That bothers me very much. I've been fascinated by it since I was four or five years old, by the songs I heard back them. That's why I try to preserve them the best I can, so people will know what they're supposed to sound like.


So was that the motivation for Songs From My Mother's Hand? And how did you settle on the versions you wanted to record?

Wiseman: The songs on album were written down in my mama's composition books, prior to when disc jockeys today would play live on the radio. We would work in the summertime, trying to survive the Depression. But in the wintertime, she would set out her radio and crochet and cook. Our programs would come on, and she'd get a few lines or a verse or something, as they were singing it. And a few days later, they'd sing the same song and she'd get some more of it.


It's inspiring really, looking at those notebooks. Parenting is a big rush these days — most mothers don't have the time to sit down and copy down songs from the radio. Or they don't prioritize something like that.

Wiseman: Oh yes. These songs, when you observe them carefully, they are a slice of life, so to speak. They talk of a true happiness, of love affairs and train wrecks, of sadness and farewell parties when you pass away. People don't change and the situations don't change, we just get a new batch. That's the reason for the longevity of some of these songs. It's all about lyrics you can identify with.


Do you hope these songs will become the new "traditionals"?

Wiseman: I think so. It's just carrying the message forward, you know. It's keeping them aware of the past. I know a lot of these songs, back in the day, were kind of gaudy and they would change them to be acceptable to radio.


It's funny, because not much has changed. That still happens.

Wiseman: That's exactly right, and it's becoming more acceptable now than it was for a long time there. A lot of [racy] things couldn't be said on television and now they show it!


Another lesson from the record is how important it is to sit down and absorb the lyrics from the music, not just a catchy beat or soundtrack to a passing activity. There's not a lot of time spent focusing on lyrics, particularly narrative lyrics, these days.

Wiseman: No, there really isn't. And record companies are trying too hard to do commercial songs, to get into charts. They won't sign an artist unless they can get him in a room to write songs, because they have the publishing rights. They want a hit song on a CD, and other songs that are trash they publish and that's what hurt the business. People had to pay $20 to get a CD with one song on it that they wanted. Now with downloads, that's reversed.


There's no artist development, either.

Wiseman: It's all going through a cycle. And that contributes to the longevity of an artist — they have two or three hits, and the first time they don't have a hit the company drops them. They're unheard of before they become established. I'm so proud of my longevity in the business. Because I've worn a number of hats.


Peter Cooper, who produced the record, said you've had the longest-running recording career in history.

Wiseman: Apparently I'm the oldest recording artist in the business! Old! There are a few people who recorded ahead of me, like Doris Day, but they haven't been as active as I've been.


Do you still love it as much as you always did?

Wiseman: Oh, I still just soak it up like a sponge, I really do. I've got about 200 songs that I know that were never recorded that I still want to do, if time permits…


So what you do think people should do to keep songs like those on Songs From My Mother's Hand alive?

Wiseman: Well, I was one of the first to take traditional country with me when I played colleges, and I had great success with that. Played a lot of listening rooms and then later the folk festivals, Newport, Carnegie Hall, the Hollywood Bowl. We got to a lot of younger people that way. They realized the stories in the songs were basically the same things happening in their lives, and that was the biggest move towards longevity. I tried to be selective and do train songs and disaster songs and love songs and happy songs.


The Newport Folk Festival in the Sixties must have really been something.

Wiseman: Oh, I was very pleased to be a part of it for several years. I was right up there when Chappaquiddick happened — that was something! But then we had people like Joan Baez. Or Mississippi John Hurt, who they thought was gone and dead but they found him down in Mississippi somewhere, and he came up there and sat under a tree and sang his songs. People like that just followed Joan around, getting acquainted with the business. [Bill] Monroe was there, and we would do a set together.


Did you hang out with Bob Dylan there?

Wiseman: I sure did. I remember we played a couple gigs together, and we'd get to the motel and just have a picking session for hours.


That must have been incredible.

Wiseman: Oh, it was just wonderful. Gordon Lightfoot would participate sometimes, too.


Old Crow Medicine Show recently said that they thought Bob Dylan is the most country musician of them all, even though he's always classified as folk. Do you agree?

Wiseman: I think so. I think he stepped up to his colors. Kind of like Woody Guthrie, I'd put them in the same class. They just did their thing and what they believed in, and carried the message they wanted to get across.


Your collaboration with John Prine, on 2007's Standard Songs for Average People, is pretty great, too.

Wiseman: Well, thank you, I was so pleased to do that project. I recently did a project with Merle Haggard, which hasn't been released yet.


Will that Merle album ever come out?

Wiseman: Oh yeah, it's been mastered, and we are just taking our time, trying to get some distribution, and the distribution is just so difficult to coordinate these days. We did six of his songs and six of the ones I recorded in the past that were most popular, "Love Letters in the Sand," "I'll Be All Smiles Tonight" and things like that. I think people are hungry for that. So many of the songs are trying to be so commercial that these days they don't say anything, they are so repetitive. They don't have the longevity because they don't say much!


And finally, after all this time, you'll be inducted into the Country Music Hall of Fame. Are you pleased? Or is it like, "What took you so long?"

Wiseman: Well, I'm very pleased. I was one of the founding members of the association, and I'm the only living member of the original board. For it to be this long to get in there, I'm very thankful. I'd almost given up on it!







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Thursday, September 25, 2014

Watch Keith Urban's Steamy New Video for 'Somewhere in My Car'

Hot people making out with other hot people is a time-honored music video tradition — from Alicia Silverstone in Aerosmith's "Amazing" to Brett Eldredge's "Beat of the Music," there's no better way to accompany a song than with a good, sweaty romp. It's something Keith Urban takes to heart in his new video for "Somewhere in My Car," released today, which features two models stripping off each other's clothes in — where else? — a car. Urban tells the story while shredding away on the guitar, choosing to narrate the action in lyric rather than participate.



It's a pretty racy event — in one scene, it's almost possible to see one of (two of, actually) model Jehane Paris' assets, and partner Rodrigo Calazans spends plenty of time showing off his rain-soaked bare chest. The video is a pretty literal illustration of "Somewhere in My Car," with a man tearfully reminiscing about a night with a former lover filled with lots of hard breathing, steamy glass and wandering hands.


Urban, who recently celebrated his 16th Number One hit with "We Were Us" and four CMA nominations, is, of course, happily married to Nicole Kidman, a woman whom he told Rolling Stone County is pretty much his soulmate.


"I have a wife who is just from another planet. She is so celestial. I say that I was born into her. That is the best way I can describe how I feel about her and us," he said. "It means that I felt like I was just sitting dormant, and she came along and I came to life. I was born into her, so who I am now was waiting the whole time."


But that doesn't mean that Urban hasn't experienced a backseat make-out session himself. He co-wrote the song and has been known to draw from personal experience in the writing process. Kidman also once told Harper's Bazaar that she credits Urban with "opening me up to trying things, my sexuality." New things, perhaps, somewhere in a car?







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Wednesday, September 24, 2014

'Nashville' Cast Previews Season Three's Big Drama

Wednesday night marks the premiere of the third season of ABC's drama Nashville, and the stakes couldn't be any higher for some of the shows most beloved (or despised) characters.



To sum up: Viewers should learn at least a little bit more about which way country queen Rayna James (Connie Britton) will go when it comes to the two men in her life. Having said yes to the onstage proposal from Luke Wheeler (Will Chase), Rayna is then blindsided by her former love Deacon Claybourne (Chip Esten), who assures her he is better equipped to love her now than he was in the past. Meanwhile, Avery (Jonathan Jackson) has been betrayed by Juliette (Hayden Panettiere), who had a fling with Jeff (Oliver Hudson). Panettiere's real-life pregnancy will impact Season Three as a "who's the daddy" drama ensues.


The characters of Zoey (Chaley Rose) and Gunnar (Sam Palladio) are also experiencing life-changing events of their own. Rolling Stone Country spoke to both of them, along with Jonathan Jackson, backstage at the Grand Ole Opry this week to find out what the season premiere and the weeks ahead have in store for the series.


"The end of Season Two left a lot of relationships open," says Jackson, after performing a pair of songs on the Opry stage. "We open up just smack in the middle of that drama. My character, Avery, is reeling, spiraling a little bit from the news of Juliette's betrayal. And Scarlett [played by Clare Bowen] was leaving town, which is a big deal. So everyone's in a little bit of a crisis."


Born in Britain but now living in Music City, Palladio was also performing during Tuesday night's Opry show, marking his 15th time on the legendary stage. He praises Nashville's "melting pot" of musical styles and explained that while he grew up being exposed to more folk and rock, he's now "very aware of country music." In terms of his character's arc for the new season, Palladio says that thanks to Gunnar's songwriting success, the tunesmith has "come into some wealth at the end of last season and he's getting a bit more stable. I think he's feeling in a good place right now."


That could all change for the tall Texan, however, with the arrival of Gunnar's ex-girlfriend, Kylie, played by singer-actress Alexa PenaVega, who "turns up in town and sort of throws things into chaos. I think viewers are going to be very excited when [she] comes back. It opens up a lot of Gunnar's past and brings up a lot of emotion in connection to his family and the loss he's had there, through losing his brother," Palladio says. "So we start to see some heart to Gunnar and some of his fragility."


In addition, Palladio acknowledges that Gunnar continues to struggle with his desire to be a successful performer as well as songwriter.


"I think there's still a part of him that would still like to be the guy up on stage playing to a huge crowd," says the actor. "I'd like to see that develop somewhat. He's taken a bit more of a back seat, behind the scenes writing the hit songs, which is great and making him a lot of money, but it'd be cool to see him in the spotlight."


Rose, as Zoey, is about to embark on a tour with Juliette, and says the situation puts her character in an "anxious place." She also has some anxiety about her leaving her man Gunnar behind with his former love, Scarlett, still in the picture and the arrival of Gunnar's high-school sweetheart.


"I spent Season One being the benevolent friend or girlfriend," Rose tells Rolling Stone Country. "It's really nice to have some negative qualities. There's some stuff that isn't so great about her that you'll see."


One character trait Rose says she has in common with Zoey is a tendency to not think before she speaks. "I don't think Zoey ever says anything to intentionally hurt anybody, and she never says anything that's hurtful, but she's got some sass. I have less of a filter than Zoey, though, so I have to process as I talk to you guys."


To prove that point (and to give viewers a little more to chew on before Season Three starts), Rose inadvertently reveals that she has some inside info she had been prepped not to reveal — mainly the paternity of Juliette's baby.


"I do know [who the father is]," she says before stopping herself. "No, I have no idea ... I know who the father of Hayden's baby is. That's what I meant. Shit."


Nashville's season premiere airs tonight (Wednesday, September 24th) at 10:00 p.m. ET. A landmark episode, it will include live performances — on both coasts — from cast members Esten and Chris Carmack, as well as Florida Georgia Line.







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'Nashville' Premieres Live From Namesake City: Sneak Preview

"I know how to love you now," Deacon said to Rayna on the Season Two finale of ABC's musical drama, Nashville, just after the longtime object of his affection accepted a marriage proposal from another guy. And with that line, Chip Esten became not just the actor who plays tormented musician Deacon Claybourne on the show, but also a staff songwriter and screenwriter… at least for one sentence.



"I Know How to Love You Now" is the title of a song that Esten will perform live on tonight's Season Three premiere of Nashville. He co-wrote the tune with country hitmaker Deana Carter, whom he met on an airplane.


"She knew me because her kids were big fans of Jessie [the Disney Channel show on which Esten played a father of four]; I knew her because she was Deana Carter!" the actor-musician tells Rolling Stone Country. "We kept threatening to write together and finally did. The song was not about Deacon and Rayna when we went to write it, but when we finished it, it sure was."


Esten, along with Chris Carmack (who plays "Will Lexington") and real-life country stars Florida Georgia Line, will all help Nashville make history on tonight's season premiere. It will be the first time ever that a scripted, primetime TV drama has included live musical performances. All three artists will sing from the set's impressively detailed replica of Nashville's famed Bluebird Café, performing once for east coast viewers and again for the west coast. Rolling Stone Country was invited to watch all three acts prep for the show on Tuesday, alongside their bands of veteran Nashville musicians and the show's musical director, Americana legend Buddy Miller.


"I wasn't really nervous about it at all until we did this rehearsal," Carmack told us after running through his song, "If It's Love," penned by singer-songwriter duo Striking Matches. "It's not just playing with a live band, in front of an audience of millions… that's not the scary part. It's all this technical stuff that goes into making this happen; there are a lot of moving parts. It's mind-boggling."


Esten will also play guitar for Florida Georgia Line on their chart-topping hit, "Dirt." Even just two years into their first major label record deal, performing on live television is old hat for the duo, who have taken the stage at awards show after multi-genre awards show. But FGL's Brian Kelley says there's a different feeling going in to tonight's performance. "Nashville is a huge show, and it's different than an awards show because the Bluebird stage is so much more intimate," he tells us. "We're just excited to be able to represent country music in this fashion; it's a huge look for country and Florida Georgia Line."


While the three songs will be in a live broadcast, the drama is already on tape. Tonight's show will switch back and forth between the Bluebird Café set and pre-recorded scenes that continue the cliffhangers of last season. Esten is, of course, tight lipped over whether Rayna (played by Connie Britton) will choose his character or country superstar Luke Wheeler, played by Will Chase. Deacon and Rayna are the dramatic equivalent of Friends' Ross and Rachel, but it may not take the whole show ending to finally see the two in romantic harmony.


"Connie was on a show called Friday Night Lights where… just because you're a happy couple doesn't mean they don't show that. So if these two characters eventually get together, I have no doubt they could keep it interesting," Esten hints. "Plus, the fact that Deacon and Rayna have this daughter together means they're never apart very long."


Carmack's character was a newlywed when the show wrapped… and newly out of the closet. Will Lexington finally admitted to wife Layla that he's gay, while — unbeknownst to him — a hidden camera was rolling on the couple's new reality show.


"My reaction — what you would've heard if you were standing in the same room — was, 'Ohhhhh!'" Carmack yells, jaw to the floor, imitating himself reading the season finale's script for the first time. "He came out on his own volition, but only to his wife. The rolling reality TV cameras make it another story."


"No matter what kind of struggles they've gone through, they've gone through them together," adds Aubrey Peeples ("Layla Grant"). "Even in their fighting, they've become closer. Really, they only have each other. They're on this reality show together, they're both struggling for their careers…. That makes anyone closer, whether they like it or not."


Nashville's Season Three premiere airs tonight (September 24th) at 10 p.m. ET on ABC.







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Re-Enter the '36th Chamber': The RZA on a Kung Fu Movie Classic

The Wu-Tang Clan is a hip-hop empire built on a foundation of kung fu movies — and last night at the Los Angeles County Museum of Art, the RZA detailed some of the connections. First on the bill: a screening of the 1978 Shaw Brothers classic The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, which had a resurgence of popularity in 1993 because of the Wu-Tang debut album, Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers). Then the Wu-Tang's producer/leader and Elvis Mitchell (curator of the presenting organization, Film Independent at LACMA) engaged in a half-hour conversation about the movie's influence on the musician's life and art. The RZA, looking sharp in a fresh white button-down shirt and dark blue jeans, discussed how he had spent a lifetime studying every aspect of kung-fu movies; here are 10 highlights.





1. Birth of a Shaolin Warrior

The RZA saw The 36th Chamber of Shaolin, then called The Master Killer, for the first time when he nine years old, on a local New York TV channel. "We'd all be watching the kung fu movies and come out and start fighting each other," he remembered. But the film awakened a social and historic awareness in him: "Beyond the kung fu, there was something about the reality of the situation." The story of fighting against an oppressive government particularly resonated with him: "As a black man in America, I didn't know that story existed anywhere else."



2. Name That Tune

The RZA knows the movie so well that when he was backstage at LACMA's Bing Theater, he could identify a fight scene just from the soundtrack. "Without seeing it, from music cues," he said, he could tell that "San Te was fighting with the axe against the monk." He also noted the subtitles had been revised in this particular film print: "They changed some of them, but I can work with that."



3. Bring da Ruckus

The RZA's favorite fight in the film: "When [San Te] loses the second fight, as far as choreography — the butterfly knives against the crescent blade. He had a plan to beat him, but he countered every move."



4. Secrets of Shaolin

Before the Wu-Tang Clan released Enter the Wu-Tang (36 Chambers), the group had adopted "chamber" as an all-purpose noun; in context it could be applied to an attractive girl or a bottle of Olde English malt liquor.



5. Early Ambitions

"When Wu-Tang first came out, there were no DVDs ; my goal was to put a cassette in your car, and have an audio movie."







6. Chinese Raps

The kung fu influence on Wu Tang was not just lyrical but musical, as the RZA pointed out: "We always used these horn hits and percussion" that borrowed from movie soundtracks. Or as Raekwon once complained to him, "You're still playing that Chinese shit." RZA shrugged, and compared the Chinese five-tone musical scale to the musical vocabulary of the blues.



7. Shaolin vs. Julliard

The RZA has worked as an actor now and again, in films including American Gangster, Coffee and Cigarettes, and GI Joe: Retaliation. He said that there's a unifying quality to his performances: "I act like a Chinese kung fu guy."



8. Commissioning Gordon

The RZA directed the reverential 2012 kung fu film The Man with the Iron Fists; Mitchell touted an upcoming sequel, The Man with the Iron Fists 2. The RZA wanted Gordon Liu, the star of 36th Chamber, to appear in his film as an aged abbot. Liu was reluctant, the RZA said, until they met and he told him how his movies had changed his own life and he wanted to provide the same inspiration to a new generation. The clincher was the character's dialogue, which RZA had to show him in person, because the lines "weren't in the screenplay, only in my BlackBerry."



9. Protect Ya Neck

"The Wu-Tang Clan, you're looking at nine individuals who needed to come up for air. It was either swim or drown," the RZA said. He spoke respectfully of Salt-n-Pepa and Run-D.M.C. as hip-hop pioneers who went to college, but opined that the difference with the Wu-Tang Clan was that seven of the nine members were felons, and were supposed to be dead or imprisoned.



10. Wu-Tang Forever

The RZA said he had internalized the movie's themes of sacrifice, brotherhood, and "the self-discipline of building yourself." He cited the five-year saga of self-improvement that San Te went through, and compared it to the recording of "Ice Cream" (the 1995 Raekwon single), when he was willing to stay up all night in search of the right sound while other producers might have gone to sleep. The Wu-Tang Clan's DJ, Mathematics, had come over to observe the session, but fell asleep. At 7 A.M., the RZA said, he completed the track — and when Mathematics woke up, and heard how it had evolved "from a snare to one of Wu-Tang's biggest songs," he was inspired to become a producer himself.







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AC/DC Confirm 'Rock or Bust' LP, Malcolm Young's Departure

AC/DC will release Rock or Bust, their first album in six years and first ever without founding rhythm guitarist Malcolm Young, later this fall. It will feature 11 new songs, one of which – "Play Ball" – will be previewed on Turner Sports as part of the network's Major League Baseball Postseason campaign on September 27th. The album will come out on December 2nd.



In addition to confirming the release of the record, the band also announced Young's permanent departure from the group. Earlier this year, the group said that an illness had forced the guitarist to take a break from the band. Now he will not be returning at all, "due to the nature of Malcolm's condition," according to a press release that did not go into specifics.


The band recorded Rock or Bust this past spring at Vancouver's Warehouse Studio with producer Brendan O'Brien and mixer Mike Fraser, both of whom worked on AC/DC's 2008 release, Black Ice. Malcolm and Angus Young's nephew, Stevie Young, played rhythm guitar on the record and will take part in the band's world tour to support Rock or Bust in 2015.


"We miss Malcolm, obviously," frontman Brian Johnson told Classic Rock in July. "He's a fighter. He's in [the] hospital, but he's a fighter. We've got our fingers crossed that he'll get strong again.... Stevie, Malcolm's nephew, was magnificent, but when you're recording with this thing hanging over you and your work mate isn't well, it's difficult. But I'm sure he was rooting for us."







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Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Hear Whitney Duncan 'Race' to a Good Time in 'Roll All Night' — Song Premiere

Fresh off her whirlwind global travels on the reality competition show, The Amazing Race, Whitney Duncan is ready to get back in the country music game. The Tennessee native returns with her first new single in more than four years, "Roll All Night." (Listen to the exclusive premiere of the song below.)



Duncan co-wrote the carefree, uptempo track with Josh Kear and Lady Antebellum guitarist-pianist Dave Haywood (who are two of the four co-writers on the Grammy-winning Lady A song, "Need You Now," among a laundry list of other country hits.) Haywood also co-produced the song alongside his group's longtime producer, Paul Worley.


"I've been a fan of Whitney's for years and was so honored to work with her," Haywood tells Rolling Stone Country. "Her voice is so authentic; she's got soul and grit and an amazing ability to convey the real stories she writes about."


Authentic… and unmistakable. Duncan sounds like no one else on country radio, with an impressive range and a Tennessee twang that's evident to everyone but her.


"I say 'roll all nat'," the 30-year-old singer admits with a laugh. "My husband still makes fun of me for my I's. I told somebody the other day, 'I'm really only country when I say 'I,'' and she said, 'You're delusional; you're country all the time.'"


Duncan isn't sure if "Roll With It" will appear on an upcoming EP or full album. She has plenty of songs for the latter option but is still working on her comeback strategy. And while she wrote or co-wrote everything on her eponymous debut album, she looked to Nashville's illustrious songwriting community this time around.


"We live in the best songwriting city in the world, so this time we really listened to other songs," Duncan explains. "And now we have a really good mix of songs to set the tone for what could be a whole record."


Duncan is known outside of the country music world for her role on the 23rd season of the hit CBS show, Survivor. She met her now-husband, Keith Tollefson on the show, and the two postponed their wedding to appear as one of 11 teams competing for a $1 million prize on the 25th season of The Amazing Race. While both CBS programs involve grueling physical challenges, Duncan says the one lesson she carried over from Survivor to Race was more of the mental nature.


"I learned how to keep my mouth shut!" she says with a smile. "You learn how to be accepting of people. I had that concept before, but it was really put to the test. They cast crazy characters with really Type A personalities!"


Duncan insists she and Tollefson aren't in the reality show business to put on any sort of a "showmance." Her attraction to both television programs was born out of love for a thrill ride, and turned into the thrill of competition.


"Our main goal was to have fun. Well that went right out the window on day one," she reports. "That competitiveness kicks in, and that's all you can think about. There's a time for loving and kissing and calling each other 'honey,' but that's not during one of the challenges. I don't mince words; he doesn't either. We are in game mode."


The Amazing Race premieres this Friday, September 26th at 8 p.m. ET on CBS.







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Watch Kenny Chesney Lead 'Today' Show 'Revival'

Kenny Chesney's worldwide fan base, dubbed No Shoes Nation, has two new disciples taking the name quite literally. During the singer's Today show appearance Tuesday, to celebrate today's release of his new album, The Big Revival, the singer performed "Somewhere With You" and "American Kids," and co-hosts Hoda Kotb and Matt Lauer both removed their footwear.



"The Big Revival was made with a lot of positive energy, and it took some time to make that," Chesney told the hosts before performing "Someone Like You" from the album, which he made during a rare, year-long break from touring. "When they hear these songs I want them to feel that positive energy. We made this album with the thread of living in the moment."


In spite of that credo, Chesney admits having his share of release-day jitters as the new LP hits stores.


"With this record, I didn't want to repeat myself, but then again I didn't want to alienate my audience either," he said. "I wanted to take these songs we made and rattle their cage."


After Lauer summarized the Tennessee native's myriad of awards and accomplishments, Chesney performed his latest Number One single, "American Kids." The first release from Revival, the tune marks his 23rd trip to the top of the country charts.







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Monday, September 22, 2014

Crystal Gayle Reflects on 'Slick Country' and Coal Miner's Family

Brenda Gail Webb was, as the famous song says, born a coal miner's daughter. But unlike her oldest sister, country music's honky-tonk girl Loretta Lynn, who penned that tune about herself, Brenda's music career would take much different trajectory.



The woman who would professionally become known as Crystal Gayle, famed for her floor-length tresses and warm, velvety vocal style, was one of the most successful country-pop crossover acts of the Seventies and Eighties. She scaled both charts with hits such as "Half the Way," "Talking in Your Sleep" and the Number Two pop smash, "Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue," none of which could be mistaken for Loretta Lynn records. Initially signed in 1970 to the same label as her sister, Decca Records (which was already home to Brenda Lee, hence her name change), she would record more straight-ahead country material there, yet never managed any chart position higher than 23. Making the switch to United Artists in 1974 and teaming with songwriter-producer Allen Reynolds (who would later to go on to produce nearly every Garth Brooks album), Gayle's songs would from that point on incorporate more pop elements. That same year, she had her first Top 10 hit with the ironically titled "Wrong Road Again."


The right road, which she has continued to travel mostly straight down the middle her entire career, has made her an international superstar, and has never been obscured by her big sister's looming, flamboyant shadow. Now, Gayle, born in Paintsville, Kentucky, in 1951 and raised in Wabash, Indiana, is the subject of a spotlight exhibit at Nashville's Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum. Featuring her numerous awards, special stage wear, a custom-made Barbie doll, an F-16 flight suit and childhood gifts she made for her mom, the "Crystal Gayle: When I Dream" exhibit also offers a look at what she was like before her flowing locks became such a trademark, thanks to a school picture where she sports a closely cropped look resembling that of a boy's cut. Running through November 3rd, the museum's exhibit also demonstrates just how much she's been influenced not only by country music, but also by jazz, pop standards and the "middle-of-the-road" sound that earned her a whole new audience by the late Seventies.


Rolling Stone Country joined Gayle at the Country Music Hall of Fame and Museum to talk about the artifacts she chose to put on display, her first Grand Ole Opry appearance, sibling rivalries and the life-changing event that sent her to "a stern German doctor."


What were some of the highlights for you in gathering items for the exhibit?

The best part for me was just going through things that I had kept forever. I can't believe I did all that. I'm tired. [Laughs] Finding the pink velvet dress with sequins on it that belonged to Loretta — it was a hand-me-down. When she was finished with her stage wear, she would hand it over to my sister Peggy and me. We were in junior high and singing around different places around town. So, seeing that brought back different memories: Mom making it fit us better, because Loretta is longer-waisted than I am, so she'd have to take it in here and there. I ran across a letter that I had written my husband. We weren't married at the time. It was my first trip to New York. I put that in there [even though] it was personal.


The flight suit must bring back some great memories?

I was on tour with Kenny Rogers around 1984-85. There was a little girl who had a brain tumor. It was for Make-a-Wish. Her father was a trainer pilot for the F-16s. He got it cleared so that I could go up. But she had already passed away by this time. We buzzed Disney World and sang "Happy Birthday," because her two favorite things were Disney World and Crystal Gayle. It was a wonderful memory. I see her parents every now and then. When I did that flight I had no idea it was a fighter plane. I always think back to as they're putting the flight suit on me and giving me this helmet with a mask and I can't breathe. I'm in turmoil inside, but it was great.


Why do you think your hits were able to cross over so well from country to pop and adult contemporary?

Music is universal, it's healing. And I think maybe [it was also] the register of my voice that crossed boundaries. We went to Korea in 2008 for the Flower Power Peace Festival. It was a three-day festival with Don McLean and Melanie. I didn't ever know that the biggest song there was "When I Dream." When I started singing it, all these lights went on everywhere! It was incredible. We went to the DMZ. They kept saying, "Do not take pictures facing that way [toward North Korea]." When we left there, we got back and I think the next week there was a lady that got shot and killed because she wandered over in their area. What happened to people that their brain has to be so different than ours? They don't have a lot over there, so you'd think they'd be a lot more mellow.


You'll be performing a rare show together with Loretta next month at her ranch in Hurricane Mills. Was there ever any sort of sibling rivalry between the two of you?

We were never together enough! She probably stayed on the road 10 times more than I would. She was constantly gone. We never had time to have problems. But I would read about it all the time that we're fighting over this or that. She would do Ralph Emery's TV show and say, "Crystal is mad at me because I recorded this album with Tammy and Dolly." [Laughs] I wasn't mad at her, I thought that was neat. But that's what would happen. You would hear little things, and I would say, "Hey, Loretta, what did you mean by that?" It happens, were sisters. The only time we ever really had words was when Mom was dying. I think that's normal because you've got so many emotions. But it wasn't something that stuck with us or anything major. It was just the turmoil of your mother dying. And I'm sure she was laying there saying, "I'm gonna spank you both…. "


And everyone deals with grief differently.

When my dad died, I developed a nervous habit. He was very shy and quiet, and I was like him. Where Loretta is more flamboyant, I went into a shell. In Loretta's book, she says she dreamed of him dying and she would be wringing her hands. Well, that was me. In real life, when she came back for the funeral, that was me standing there doing the wringing of the hands. My mother took me to the doctor because it affected me. It was more internal. I didn't sit there and just cry, cry, cry. But it did hit me inside. He told me to quit. He was this stern German doctor… and I quit. [Laughs] I think I needed that father figure to tell me to quit.


"Don't It Make My Brown Eyes Blue" was Number One 37 years ago but it still sounds fresh. Why do you think that is?

Richard Leigh wrote that song and it was just so well-written. It's a timeless song and I always say I'm glad I got a hold of it. Because that song they were getting ready to send it to California for Shirley Bassey. Allen Reynolds went to Richard's house to hear some of the new songs that Richard had written. I never thought it was for here, for Nashville. When he played it for Allen, Allen said, "You're not sending it anywhere. We almost didn't get it. That was a live take, what you hear on the radio. Allen put a few strings on it, but that was a live band.


Did you feel any backlash being a country artist played on pop radio?

The only backlash I would get is every once in while you would see an article and it would say "slick country." Kenny [Rogers] would get locked into that as well. But we're more country now than anything being played [on country radio]. I went middle-of-the-road because Loretta said, "Don't sing my songs and don't sing anything I would sing, because you'll be compared." She was right. I wouldn't have made it if I had just done that. But I love those songs.


What are you working on now, musically?

I'm doing a couple of different things, but one is songs that inspired me as a kid: "Please Help Me, I'm Falling," "Ribbon of Darkness," which was the first song I sang on the Opry. I was about 15-16. I got to sing on the Opry because Loretta got sick and she somehow talked them into letting me take her place. I've always wanted to find somebody who may have been at that show and had taken a picture. I know I wore the shiny silver dress my mother made me. The Opry was great; I'd roam the back halls with Ernest Tubb's daughter and son. We go up into the rafters, places where we weren't supposed to be. We would see Jim Reeves. I remember being there when Roy Rogers and Dale Evans came through. They were backstage. I thought, "Wow, this is cool."







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Blake Shelton Relishes Relationships Made on 'The Voice'

When those big red chairs flip around during blind auditions on The Voice, expect to see Blake Shelton's smirking mug in one of them for some time to come.



"It would break my heart to not be there," the 38-year-old entertainer tells Rolling Stone Country. "At this point, to see somebody else sittin' there in my chair doing that job — I think I would never be able to watch it without being jealous."


Shelton's relationship with The Voice has been mutually beneficial for Shelton and NBC. The Oklahoma native's fame was already skyrocketing when the singing competition made its debut in 2011. But thanks to a potent combination of musical savvy, smart-aleck barbs, killer dimples and an audience of 10-15 million viewers, his star suddenly shot into the stratosphere.


A pair of Number One country albums followed Shelton's Voice debut, then half a dozen Grammy nominations. He won two Academy of Country Music awards and six Country Music Association trophies, including Entertainer of the Year and Album of the Year for his 2013 record, Based on a True Story…


The Voice gave Shelton something few country singers can match: mainstream household name recognition. But joining the show's ranks was a bit of Hollywood culture shock — and ego check.


"It's so hard for us artists to all of a sudden have a boss, and to put ourselves in that situation of having to answer to somebody, like these people at NBC, and producers and stuff," Shelton confides. "We have a job, and it's weird to work yourself up to this level where you're like a star, and you're the boss and you only do what you want to do, and then all of a sudden, you sign on to do something like that."


Yet his tight relationship with NBC worked to Shelton's advantage last year, when deadly tornadoes swept through the suburbs of Oklahoma City, leaving damage and devastation near his hometown of Ada, Oklahoma. He partnered with the network for a rapidly assembled televised event called Healing in the Heartland: Relief Benefit Concert that raised six million dollars for the United Way of Central Oklahoma.


It's also no coincidence that Shelton's new album, Bringing Back the Sunshine, will be released September 30 — one week after The Voice returns for a seventh season. He'll most likely perform his new single "Neon Light" on the program, as well as make an appearance on NBC's Today show on October 1st.


It's no wonder Shelton has no plans to leave The Voice anytime soon.


"I love it so much, and I made some of the most important relationships in my life by being a part of that show, with some of the coaches, some of the people who just came to perform, but mostly those who have been on my teams over the year… they're my family now," he says.


Leaving The Voice would also mean ditching his bromance with fellow coach Adam Levine. "That part probably wouldn't bother me as much as people think," Shelton says with a laugh.


Even with new coaches Gwen Stefani and Pharrell Williams in the mix, fans still obsess over the two-headed Voice phenomenon known in certain circles as "Bladam."


"It's so foreign to see anything that's genuine on television these days. That's why I think so much attention is focused on Adam and I," Shelton theorizes. "You can tell we really like each other. We really are friends, and we're giving each other crap like we've known each other all our lives. I just think the world of that dude."


The Voice premieres tonight at 8 p.m. ET on NBC.







from RollingStone.com: Music http://www.rollingstone.com/music/news/blake-shelton-the-voice-season-7-20140922

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Friday, September 19, 2014

Charlie Daniels Announces 'Volunteer Jam'

It may not happen until next summer, but Charlie Daniels' legendary Volunteer Jam show is returning to downtown Nashville. Daniels launched the all-star concerts in 1974 at the War Memorial Auditorium, and through the years featured guests as varied as Garth Brooks, Don Henley and a reunited Lynyrd Skynyrd.



Set for August 12, 2015, this new installment of the Volunteer Jam will be held in Nashville's Bridgestone Arena, a far cry from the more intimate War Memorial. While guests have yet to be announced for the show, the size of the venue indicates it should be artists of the A-list variety. Which should be good news for the Journey Home Project, a not-for-profit charity benefitting U.S. servicemen and women.


Formed in the Seventies, the Charlie Daniels Band became one of the leaders in Southern-fried country music, mixing rock & roll with Daniels' fiery fiddle and chicken pickin' guitar. With hits like "Long Haired Country Boy," "The South's Gonna Do It" and, of course, the iconic "The Devil Went Down to Georgia," Daniels and his group became a top concert draw, culminating in the 1974 Volunteer Jam. That loose performance begat a series of Volunteer Jam shows, including some that were staged outside of Tennessee.


Guest artists for next year's Jam will be announced in the coming weeks, with tickets on sale this spring.







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Watch Lady Antebellum Go Back to High School in 'I Did With You' Video

Lady Antebellum teamed with Monty Powell to write their new song, "I Did With You" specifically for The Best of Me, an upcoming Nicholas Sparks film. But for the song's brand-new video, the lyrics are played out not on the big screen but on the stage of a high school play. (Watch above.)



The Best of Me, starring Michelle Monaghan and James Marsden, hits theaters October 17th; its soundtrack will be out October 7th. Watch the movie trailer (also starring Lady Antebellum) here. Other artists on the compilation include Eli Young Band, Hunter Hayes, David Nail, Kip Moore, Kacey Musgraves and Thompson Square.



September has already been a month of a lot of Lady A celebrations, including the birth of guitarist/pianist Dave Haywood's first child and the chart-topping success of their latest single, "Bartender" — the trio's ninth career Number One hit. Capping off their whirlwind month, the group's fifth studio album, 747, hits stores September 30th.


"We need to evolve," Charles Haywood tells Rolling Stone Country of the more boundary-pushing sound of their new LP. "Recently, the songs that have been our biggest successes have been left-of-center for us."







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Tim McGraw Talks Character Building With Clooney in 'Tomorrowland'

George Clooney leads the cast of the upcoming science-fiction adventure film, Tomorrowland. The Disney production, set for release in May 2015, casts the Oscar-winner as an inventor and former boy genius who befriends a science-minded teen in a whirlwind journey to uncover secrets of the otherworldly place known as "Tomorrowland." That place, according to the official movie synopsis, is somewhere in space and time, and somewhere in the main characters' collective memory. Sound a bit confusing? Well, the plot is still somewhat of a mystery even to another actor in the film, Tim McGraw.



"There's not much I can say about it because I read the script, I acted in the movie and I still don't understand it," the country singing actor tells Rolling Stone Country with a laugh. "It's a huge production; there's a lot going on. All the stuff I hear back, it's going to be spectacular. "


McGraw plays a father and a rocket scientist in the movie. ("Guess which one of those is a stretch," he jokes.) Tomorrowland is the country star's ninth feature film, following roles in such blockbusters as Country Strong, The Blind Side and Friday Night Lights.


"I get a lot [of scripts]; it's just finding the right thing for the right time," says McGraw. "It's got to be something that moves me. As an artist, you've got to have a visceral reaction. If you have to think about it, it's probably not the right thing."


The "Shotgun Rider" singer says his acting career presents a challenge he doesn't face in the music biz: staying in character and checking Tim McGraw at the door. But the two worlds share what he finds to be a hurdle these days: the lack of a private life for public figures.


"In this day and age, everybody knows everything about everybody, which I think is terrible because you don't have any mystique about anything, and that's why careers don't last as long," he says. "People say music isn't timeless anymore, well I don't think it's necessarily the music, I just think you know too much about the artist. So, when an actor is so good that you can know all that stuff about them and you still buy that character, still believe them every step of the way, that's something else. That's real art."


Directed by Brad Bird (Mission: Impossible — Ghost Protocol, The Incredibles), Tomorrowland also stars Britt Robertson, Hugh Laurie, Judy Greer and Kathryn Hahn.


"I got to work with some great people," says the husband of Faith Hill and father to three teenage daughters. "That ugly guy, George Clooney, that's who everybody at my house wants to talk about!"







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See Johnny Depp Play a Weepy Solo on Danzig's 'Mother' With Ryan Adams

Johnny Depp got a rousing "Johnny! Johnny! Johnny!" chant Thursday night after making a surprise appearance at Ryan Adams' London concert where they played Danzig's anti-PMRC screed "Mother" as an encore song.



At the 2,000-person-capacity O2 Shepherd's Bush Empire venue, the actor donned his usual wide-brimmed cap for the occasion and opted to play his own weepy, bluesy guitar lead instead of the pyrotechnic solo on the original. Depp also stuck around to close out the show, playing guitar on Adams' unrequited love song "Kim," off his recently released Ryan Adams album.


Depp has been particularly busy in the music realm in recent years. Earlier this month, he sat in on a half-hour blues jam with Paul McCartney. A month before that, he sat in for Elvis Costello to play guitar on the song "Kansas City" during the sessions for Lost on the River: The New Basement Tapes, a collection of previously unreleased lyrics that Bob Dylan wrote while making his legendary Basement Tapes. And in June, Depp joined Aerosmith onstage to play another bluesy solo on their cover of "Train Kept-a-Rollin'." Over the past few years, Depp has joined Willie Nelson, the Black Keys, Alice Cooper and Marilyn Manson to play guitar.


Adams has been busy lately, too. In addition to working on his new record, the singer-songwriter has produced sessions for Fall Out Boy and Jenny Lewis. He's also been collaborating with actors other than Depp, drafting the "Mistress of the Dark," Elvira, for his "Gimme Something Good" video and comedians Garry Shandling and Jeff Garlin for promo videos.







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Thursday, September 18, 2014

Guided by Voices Break Up, Cancel Tour

Prolific indie rockers Guided by Voices have broken up again. The band announced the news on its website and canceled all of the tour dates on its planned fall trek. Ticket refunds are available at point of purchase.



"Guided by Voices has come to an end," the band said in its statement. "With four years of great shows and six killer albums, it was a hell of a comeback run.... Thanks to everyone who has supported GBV."


The group had reunited its "classic '93 – '96 lineup" in 2010 to play Matador Records' 21st anniversary concert. The band, whose membership has always revolved around frontman Robert Pollard, had broken up in 2004 with the singer-songwriter saying at the time that, after being a band since 1983, the time felt right.


After the 2010 reunion concert, the group picked up the rigorous touring and recording schedule that made them indie icons in the Eighties and Nineties, when they often put out multiple records a year. Guided by Voices issued three full-lengths in 2012 alone, a full-length and an EP in 2013 and two in the first half of 2014, in addition to many, many seven-inches and singles. In December, Pollard told Rolling Stone he would consider working on a third Guided by Voices album, in addition to other projects, but "it depends on how much live work we get."


"When I make an album, I tire of it pretty quickly," Pollard said in the interview to explain why he is so prolific. "I may listen to it for a week after it's finished and then I put it away. Within another few weeks, I may have written 10 or 15 new songs. By the time one album comes out, I'm already tired of listening to it and on to the next. I've got quite a few vehicles to work with."


Pollard has not commented on why the group chose to disband.







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