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Author: George Bounacos

  • Grammy 2014 Live Blog

    grammy awardBeyonce opens the show with gyrations on and around a chair with strobes, fog,  and lights highlighting her body dressed in fishnets and sheer stuff.  Bleeped a few days, Mr. Beyonce shows in a tux and duets with her.  Blake Shelton looks slightly traumatized.

    LL Cool J gets to reprise his hosting duties as the most inoffensive host the show has seen since John Denver.  Poor James had to remind the audience he sings too.  Then he offers CBS’ obligatory shout outs to Kendrick, Daft Pump, Pink, Taylor Swift and a little something for everyone to stay tuned in.  Even Paul and Ringo were shown sitting side-by-side.

    Annak Kendrick and Pharrell show this year’s presentation speeches are again horrible.  The Grammy Kiss of Death should go to Kendrick Lamar.  I’m 1 for 1 tonight because the novelty-like Macklemore and Ryan Lewis show they’re going to smack down Kendrick in each head-to-head competition

    Lorde gets to sing Royals, the first of the five nominees lined up by this year’s producers.It’s less impressive stripped down.

    Three seconds manage to pass between another reminder of tonight’s performances before Target’s sponsorship gives way to Shakira mouthing the word to her new singles. Our sister sites will critique commercials next week during what LL Cool J just called The Big Game for copyright reasons so no more tonight.

    Hunter Hayes’ hair plays his new track Invisible.  I approve of the message since LL told us all to listen to all of the lyrics.  That is two straight Grammy performances for young Mr. Hayes, who is well on his way to a fine pop-country career.  The power ballad is formulaic without the obvious hooks.

    Juanes and Anna Farris would make beautiful babies.  Instead they give the Best Pop Duo Group/Performance award. The competition is tough. The Grammy should go to Daft Punk… and it does!   The Power Rangers ascend the stage with Pharrell and Nile Rogers as Pharrell adlibs the acceptance and is the second award winner in a row to get played off the stage.

    Steve Coogan gets a cute line off on Juicy J and intros Katy Perry as the two hit a well-staged version of Dark Horse.  Broadway is calling Ms. Katy. You would have preferred another version of Roar?

    Not risking a twerking episode on this track, Robin Thicke jailbreaks Chicago from the assisted living home and sings with a well-dressed insurance agent who may have been a friend of Alan Thicke’s.   Chicago Transit Authority, the seminal album produced by Phil Ramone (obligatory applause after his passing).  Robin isn’t a bad choice as he works well with Robert Lamm and covers for the missing Cetera vocals.

    They give way to Keith Urban, who really is a guitar gunslinger, but instead lets his smooth chest and swaying hips carry his performance with Gary Clark, Jr.   Keith nails a power chord or two, but I don’t see his left hand move past the fifth fret for at least two minutes, and then he played a little with Gary Clark, who showed Keith what the blues sound like when they’re melodic.  Best part of the night is when Urban playfully punched Gary much like The Hulk punched Thor during The Avengers.

    Now we’re backstaging with Taylor Swift and looking at a silly TwitPic stand.  Yawn.  Has the Super Bowl pre-game started yet? As 9 o’clock tolls, both televised Grammys are completely boring although better than the commercial-week version of Higher and Higher is even more bland than Rita Coolidge’s version.  Two plus hours to go?  Really?

    We break right out of commercial to John Legend, whose streak of awesome live performances continues.  His voice travels from baritone to falsetto, sustaining notes, all solo with 88 keys.  The musician-laden lower audience agrees and stands to applaud.

    Charlie Wilson and Kevin Hart, who is smiling since he has two weeks running with the number one movie smiling, present Best Rock Song.   The dinosaurs (Maccca, the Stone, Ozzy) vs Muse vs Gary Clark seemed unfair competition. No one played off Dave Grohl or Sir Paul as they wander off with Sirvana’s award.

    The immediate transition to Taylor Swift at a piano doesn’t feel right unless we’ve joined American Idol already in progress.

    Bruno Mars intros Pink & Nate Ruess.  Pink is doing her acrobatics again, which is awesome.  Singing as she does as she sways on ropes over the crowd takes multi-tasking to an extreme when 10 million people are watching.  And the harmony she has with Ruess is perfectly reproduced live. Pink rocks.

    Arianna Grande and Miguel are on stage to give Lorde the Best Pop Performance Award for Royals.  Yes, she beat out Bruno Mars, Justin Timberlake to mention just two of the artists who should have won.  To her credit, she gives perhaps the best speech of the night.

    Ozzy shows up to present an award.  Close-captioning?  Check.  They intro Ringo.   He’s got Peter Frampton on guitar and other Ringo All-Star band members plus others showing respect.  You know who isn’t there?  Paul McCartney.  Ringo is wearing a sparkly mock black suit with red polka dots or sniper laser sights.   Respect to Ringo, but the hyped “reunion” isn’t on tonight’s show.

    Jamie Foxx tells people to give it up for Ringo.  Then he does five bad jokes and gives the expected Grammy to Hova and JT for Holy Grail.   Angelina Jolie and Malificcent are longer than any performance in a paid spot for the upcoming movie.

    Back from commercial, LL Cool J gives some love to the 30th anniversary of Def Jam.

    Imagine Dragons won an untelevised Grammy, which is nice and are joined by Kendrick, who is going to continue to play second fiddle tonight, but the crowd loves it.  Even Bey and Jay are bouncing up and down.  Every year has a Grammy performance worth noting for posterity.  This is 2014’s.

    Who follows that?  Kaycee Musgraves and her novelty lyrics, joined by a five piece country band draped in Christmas tree lights.

    We are still averaging two awards per hour at the award show.

    Julia Roberts shows up to intro the almost 50th anniversary of The Beatles performance on American TV with a long commercial for the Grammy two hour special in two weeks.  Finally, Ringo and Macca take the stage together.  Yoko and Sean Lennon joined the audience in sort of bobbing to the music.

    Gloria Estefan and Marc Anthony acknowledge Pharrell as Producer of the Year and then award Best Pop Vocal Album to Bruno Mars’ Unorthodox Jukebox As this generation’s hitmaking Macca, that’s appropriate.

    Jeremy Renner intros Willie Nelson and Kris Kristofferson, who won a lifetime achievement award earlier.   Just like the Fab Two earlier, much respect for these guys and their friends Merle Haggard and Blake Shelton, a young piker in their midst.  The crowd helps them get through some of country’s most endearing hits created by the three older guys.  Keeping the country vibe going, Martina McBride and Zac Brown pay special tribute to George Jones and Ray Price before announcing Best Country Album. Kacey Musgraves smokes the heavily favored Taylor Swift and Blake Shelton.

    Pharrell gets his moment of glory as he sings lead with Stevie Wonder and Niles Rogers on either side.  They sing Get Lucky with the natural mashup of Freak Out.  This is the other special moment of the night.

    Cyndi Lauper intros Sara Barielles and Carole King.  You’ve seen the Elton-Billy Joel concert?  This one is the authentic singer-songwriter version with two people who extend way beyond the single and harmonize to make the other sound better. Another strong performance moment for the night.   Sara is overjoyed enough to jump up and down in place after as they give Song of the Year to a surprised Lorde for Royals.

    Jared Leto does a nice job of honoring Lou Reed.  Classical pianist star Lang Lang performs One with Metallica as fire and lasers swirl around the stage.  For the first time tonight I’ve said the words, “I would buy that”.

    After the brilliance of hearing a classical genius with a metal guitar, we listen to Steve Tyler serenade Smokey Robinson off-key.  They’re here for Record of the Year, which smartly goes to Daft Punk’s “Get Lucky”.  Niles Rogers gives more love to Smokey as the robots defer to their vocalist.

    Queen Latifah gives Same Love the lovely intro it deserves.  Then the magic gets weird and wonderful as Queen Latifah marries 33 couples.  Madonna shows up with a walking stick and a slow version of Open Your Heart.  She looks and sounds horrible, but what a moment.

    A long memoriam video package gives way to Miranda Lambert and Green Day’s Billie Joe Armstrong paying tribute to The Everly Brothers with a pretty duet of When Will I Be Loved?

    Alicia Keys led Yoko Ono (which explained her presence) and Olivia Harrison, George’s widow.  Daft Punk scoops up Album of the Year.  This time Paul Williams gets to speak, eloquent as always and the three dozen couples married minutes earlier.

    LL Cool J gives the stage up to NIN, Queens of the Stone Age, Dave Grohl and Lindsey Buckingham.  It’s an eclectic pairing and Grohl seems to get a workout behind the drum kit.  What it lacks in imagination is still better in comparison to last year’s ragged ending.

    In all, half the performances were pretty damn good, but n0t the half that might have been expected.  The group wedding was a pretty great television moment and for every nod to contemporary music (see Daft Punk), the show continually moved back to the world watched by safe VH-1, soccer moms.

  • Rare Tommy Editions Available Now For Pre-Sale

    Roger Daltrey and Pete Townshend
    For those who still rock, we salute you.

    Who fans are already buying up pre-sale copies of Tommy that include 20 new demo versions, a full live version that has never been released before and engineering.

    Tommy, the defining rock opera, has now sold more than 20 million copies and influenced multiple generations of music lovers and musicians. Be sure to check out the live version, which includes tracks from 1969.

    Most of the live version is from a single show at The Capital Theater in Ottowa, Ontario, Canada. As the engineers changed reels (don’t worry about it, go ask your mother), three songs were missed and have been added to this disc from other shows on that tour.

    So why hasn’t heard this before? Pete Townshend told legendary Who soundman Bob Pridden to destroy the tapes. Luckily from us 44 years later, the tapes are still intact.

    You can hear music history for yourself. A famous Tommy track from the live version is hiding behind a fun game of Who Concentration.  I won’t tell you which one, but you’ll hear an iconic strumming guitar and might have some Elton John flashbacks.  But damn, that version is good.  I’m still waiting for someone to hook me up so I don’t keep returning to the page!

    Check out the list of extras on just one of the discs, have a listen to Pinb–, the mystery song and check out the pre-sale version that’s right for you at the link below the track listing.

    Tommy by The Who – Demos and Extras

    Disc 2 Demos & Extras
    1. Overture 4:07
    2. It’s A Boy 0:41
    3. 1921 3:13
    4. Amazing Journey 4:47
    5. Dream One 3:09
    6. Sparks 7:38
    7. The Hawker 4:45
    8. Christmas 4:42
    9. Acid Queen 3:35
    10. Underture (Dream Two) 1:47
    11. Do You Think It’s Alright 0:26
    12. Pinball Wizard 3:42
    13. There’s A Doctor 0:24
    14. Go To The Mirror! 4:32
    15. Success 0:10
    16. Tommy Can You Hear Me 1:15
    17. Smash The Mirror 1:37
    18. Sensation 2:47
    19. Miracle Cure 0:11
    20. Sally Simpson 4:50
    21. I’m Free 2:27
    22. Welcome 3:26
    23. We’re Not Gonna Take It 5:02
    24. Trying To Get Through 2:27
    25. Young Man Blues 2:47

  • Tori Kelly Offers Foreword To 2014

    You know Tori Kelly already, but you’re forgiven if you can’t quite place her.

    Last year’s “Handmade Songs by Tori Kelly” grabbed lots of attention including Billboard’s iconic “Heatseekers” chart and a top 10 iTunes pop chart placement.  Or maybe you remember her appearing in “America’s Most Talented Kids” at age 12 or getting to Hollywood Week on season 9 of “American Idol” at 18.

    Maybe you know her from the viral YouTube channel with more than 56 million views.

    Yeah, that’s it.

    Everyone has managed to catch a Tori Kelly video by now, especially after an appearance on “The Ellen Show”for the new single Dear No One.  I spent a big part of today with Tori on shuffle, and the “Dear No One” track, complete with a video filmed on location by Brooklyn, has an infectious chorus and showcases her crazy range.  A musical chameleon,  there is something on her Tori Kelly’s “Foreword”, the brand new EP, for everyone.

    Ballads like “Paper Hearts” and “Daydream” are gorgeous and showcase even more of her voice than the bouncier up-tempo tracks.  The range among the new five songs is well worth space in your music rotation.

    What’s coming in 2014? Maybe that long rumored full album? “I’m just excited to be doing what I love and sharing part of myself through my music. I feel like “Foreword”, the “Dear No One” video and& my tour are just an introduction to what’s coming in 2014,” said Kelly on her way to making “Dear No One” the iTunes single of the week.

    “I’m always very real in my songwriting—I’m not trying to put on a mask or hide behind any kind of gimmick,” says Kelly, who lists artists as eclectic as Lauren Hill, Jill Scott, Jeff Buckley, and Maxwell as key inspirations. “No matter what I’m going to do my own thing. So when people tell me that they relate to my songs, or that something I’ve written really connects with them, that’s just the best feeling in the world.”

    Have a look at the new video and then find out about her blitzing two week tour opening tonight in Colorado.

    Tori Kelly Tour Dates

    6 DENVER, CO – GOTHIC THEATRE
    8 AUSTIN, TX – CENTRAL PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
    9 DALLAS, TX – PROPHET BAR
    10 HOUSTON, TX – HOUSE OF BLUES
    12 ATLANTA, GA – THE LOFT
    13 CARRBORO, NC – CAT’S CRADLE
    14 WASHINGTON, DC – FILMORE
    15 PHILADELPHIA, PA – TLA
    17 BOSTON, MA – SINCLAIR
    18 NEW YORK, NY – IRVING PLAZA
    20 TORONTO, ON – OPERA HOUSE
    21 CHICAGO, IL – HOUSE OF BLUES
    22 DES MOINES, IA – WOOLY’S
    23 MINNEAPOLIS, MN – VARSITY