web analytics

Blog

  • American Idol Season 8 – Playing For 2nd Place

    Kris and Danny are playing for second place right?

    Paula isn’t sitting with the rest of the judges. Is she performing again? Ok, there she is. She must be dressed up as an empty chair.

    Katy Perry at YouTube Live
    Katy Perry at YouTube Live
    Jordin Sparks and Katy Perry are performing tonight.

    Cause you’re hot then you’re cold
    You’re yes then you’re no

    Right now Perry is hot. But I have a feeling that she is going to be cold very soon in this fickle music landscape.

    Noah is singing I’m The World’s Greatest. Who is Noah? I’m not sure, but Alicia Keys introduced him after talking about donating money to Africa. Is it really good to be having young kids perform R. Kelly songs these days? Yes, Noah is male. I guess that makes it better.

    Do you think that Kris Allen wishes he wasn’t quite so married these days? I think it will be great for his marriage when he doesn’t win this.

    Jordin Sparks is out singing her new single, Battlefield. It’s an ok song and is more dramatic than anything on her bubble gum rookie album. It’s what you’d expect her first single off her sophomore album to be. Thankfully she’s singing here because she needs some publicity badly. No, not like Cassie and Rihanna. You’ll see naked pictures of Adam Lambert before you’ll ever see pictures of Jordin Sparks. Ok, maybe that was a bad example.

    Before we find out who is eliminated, Katy Perry is singing Waking Up In Vegas. She’s wearing an Adam Lambert cape.

    Perry is neck and neck with Anne Hathaway in the contest to determine who the pastiest celebrity on earth is.

    And the first person who will compete next week for all the marbles is Kris Allen. His wife has to be upset.

    And the person who will compete next week against Kris Allen is Adam Lambert.

    This might be the hardest “Home Sweet Home” ever to watch. Danny dude, you walked tall.

    Photo of Katy Perry by thomascrenshaw and shared via creative commons

  • Birthday Props for Stevie

    stevie

    No disrespect to Bob Dylan (or Smokey Robinson, who Dylan thinks is America’s greatest living poet), but no one writes songs better than Stevie Wonder, and that crown was sewn up back in 1976, when he was the biggest thing since sliced bread. In the thirty-plus years since “Songs in the Key of Life”, his run of classics has slowed, but it hasn’t stopped: “Lately”, “All I Do”, “That Girl”, “Overjoyed” and “These Three Words” are just a handful of the lyrical and vocal masterpieces that have come from a post-Seventies Stevie.

    I won’t even get into the stuff he made before then. Let’s just say that “Talking Book”, “Innervisions” and “Songs in the Key of Life” are albums every human that’s into music should own (and “Fulfillingness’ First Finale, trippy as it is, isn’t a slouch, either). It’s an achievement to make one classic album; Stevie made a DECADE’s worth of them. No wonder the man has won more Grammy Awards than any other pop, rock or R&B performer in history.

    One way you can judge a great song is by how many times it’s remade, and you could fill a box set with nothing but Stevie covers: everyone from Barbra Streisand to the Red Hot Chili Peppers to 2Pac to Wayne Brady has covered (or heavily sampled) Stevie. He has to be, apart from Dylan, the most covered songwriter of the rock era.

    Those too young to remember Stevie in his Grammy-winning, slimmer phase and want to know who the dude with the sunglasses was that performed with the Jonas Brothers was definitely need to be schooled. His music, for the excellent lyricism, pioneering musicianship, stellar vocals (every R&B singer that doesn’t sound like Marvin or Michael sounds like Stevie) and positive message, is as relevant now as it was when it was first out.

    I was fortunate enough to see Stevie live about 18 months ago, and with no light show and no choreography, blew the roof off of Madison Square Garden. I’ve been going to concerts fairly regularly for 15 years now, and I have never seen a better show.

    In 1980, Stevie wrote and recorded a song called “Happy Birthday” in dedication to Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. (Stevie was one of the most responsible forces for getting King’s birthday recognized as a national holiday). The song has also become a standard of sorts-go to a black birthday party and I guarantee someone’s gonna break into Stevie’s song either right before, during, or right after the candles are blown out!

    Here are two of my favorite songs by him. One from his golden era (the lyrics to this song are among the best-and yet simplest-ever written), one from more recently.

  • First Listen: Jordin Sparks “Battlefield”

    26 years after Pat Benatar warned us that “Love is a Battlefield”, here comes “American Idol” Season 6 winner Jordin Sparks to basically tell us the same thing.

    “Battlefield” is the first single from Jordin’s sophomore album, which is scheduled to arrive in stores sometime in July. This is the latest in a glut of “Idol”-related releases. Elliott Yamin’s album came out last week, Ruben Studdard and LaKisha Jones arrive next week, Daughtry debuted his (their?) new single last week and have an album coming in June, and now Jordin. Even Paula Abdul has a new single out. It’s like everyone’s trying to put something out (or at least create awareness) before the current season is over. Or maybe that’s the point.

    Anyways, “Battlefield” is a bit more aggressive tha you’d normally expect from the (sorry to say) personality-deficient Jordin Sparks. The rumor is that the song was written by OneRepublic’s Ryan Tedder (it sounds like him), and if so, the guy’s definitely becoming a songwriting force to be reckoned with (Beyonce’s “Halo”, Kelly Clarkson’s album, etc.). This definitely smells like a hit. Check it out and let us know what you think.