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Herrmanns' Jukebox Rock Blog
Friday, 12 March 2004
Clapton Wipes Away
Bluesman Eric Clapton recently said that that he could no longer perform tow of his best known songs: "Tears in Heaven" and "My Father's Eyes." Both songs are about the loss of his four-year-old son Conner, who died in 1991 when he fell from a window in the musician's New York apartment. Clapton realized that he could no longer put himself into the songs at a string of recent concerts in Japan: "I didn't feel the loss anymore, which is so much a part of performing those songs," Clapton said. "I really have to connect with the feelings that were there when I wrote them. They're kind of gone and I really don't want them to come back, particularly. My life is a different life now." (Arrow FM)

Posted by hsjukebox at 6:03 PM GMT
Updated: Friday, 9 April 2004 1:21 PM BST
Saturday, 28 February 2004
Hendrix Show Adds Santana
Latin rocker Carlos Santana has just been added to an impressive list of performers taking part in the upcoming Experience Hendrix concerts, which pays homage to the late guitar hero. The three-date tour will start in Seattle on February 22nd and work its way down to San Francisco. The lineup will change for each show, but collectively includes such musicians as Pearl Jam's Mike McReady, Buddy Guy, Living Colour, Jerry Cantrell and Bad Company vocalist Paul Rodgers.
(Arrow FM)

Posted by hsjukebox at 11:53 AM GMT
Updated: Friday, 9 April 2004 1:18 PM BST
Trashed Lennon Guitar On Sale
Mood:  amorous
Now Playing: Acoustic Guitar

An acoustic guitar found in a New York trash bin and thought to have belonged to John Lennon went on sale Monday with an auction price of nearly $2 million. Why so much? Well, mostly because the guitar was engraved with Lennon's trademark etchings including a self-portrait. The beaten up guitar is currently on offer at the US online auction website MomentsinTime.com. Lennon reportedly gave the guitar to a friend in the Seventies. It was passed on to the guy's in-laws before being tossed in the garbage. A maintenance man knew the family had the guitar and found it in 1981. "Beyond it being an instrument on which he played and composed, it's also an extraordinary work of hand-art created by Lennon," said the website's curator, Gary Zimet. The guitar also has a drawing of an apple and a heart pierced by an arrow.
(Arrow FM)


Posted by hsjukebox at 11:45 AM GMT
Updated: Saturday, 28 February 2004 11:47 AM GMT
Bruce, Alicia Hail Rock Hall
Mood:  loud
OutKast, Kid Rock also set to induct Class of '04

Bruce Springsteen, Dave Matthews, Keith Richards, Alicia Keys, OutKast, Kid Rock, Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne will be on hand to induct the Class of 2004 into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame.
To add an element of surprise to the event, a list of who will be inducting whom has not been revealed, though several presenters have connections to inductees that offer possible hints. Kid Rock has long been an outspoken fan of inductee Bob Seger, a fellow Detroit rocker, while another inductee, ZZ Top, lent guitarist Billy Gibbons to play on Rock's latest album. Tom Petty and Jeff Lynne recorded a pair of records with George Harrison as the Travelling Wilburys, and Lynne also produced Harrison's 1987 hit Cloud 9 and his final studio album, 2002's Brainwashed. OutKast's Andre 3000 is a longtime Prince fan, and Alicia Keys is an alum of the funk star's annual weeklong concert birthday bash.

Other inductees include Jackson Browne, Traffic and the Dells. Rolling Stone founder and publisher Jann Wenner, who launched the magazine more than three decades ago, will be inducted in the non-performer category.

The event will be held at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York City on March 15th. The program will air on VH1 on March 21st.
(Rolling Stones Network)


Posted by hsjukebox at 11:39 AM GMT
Updated: Saturday, 28 February 2004 11:43 AM GMT
Sunday, 8 February 2004
Yes Confirms Anniversary Tour

Yes will begin a North American arena tour April 15 in Seattle, featuring the classic lineup of Rick Wakeman (keyboards), Steve Howe (guitar), Jon Anderson (vocals), Alan White (drums) and Chris Squire (bass). Each date will feature a specially designed set by Roger Dean, the artist responsible for the band's album covers.

The 35th Anniversary tour is in support of the just-released "Ultimate Yes" collection (Rhino), a two-CD set of hits and essentials, plus a newly recorded bonus CD with five unreleased tracks, including the new song "Show Me." The set was released in the U.K. last summer, where it debuted at No. 10 on the album chart.

Additionally, the tour also supports the companion DVD release of "Yesspeak," an extensive documentary the band created with Robert Garofalo (Classic Pictures) featuring more than three hours of interview and performance footage.

Here are Yes' tour dates:

April 15: Seattle (Key Arena)
April 16: San Jose, Calif. (HP Pavilion)
April 18: San Diego (Cox Arena)
April 20: Anaheim, Calif. (The Pond)
April 21: Las Vegas (Mandalay Bay)
April 24: Mexico City (Sports Palace)
April 27: Greensboro, N.C. (Greensboro Coliseum)
April 28: Atlanta (Phillips Arena)
April 30: Ft. Lauderdale (Office Depot Center)
May 1: Tampa, Fla. (Times Forum)
May 4: Chicago (Allstate Arena)
May 5: Detroit (Palace of Auburn Hills)
May 7: Toronto (Air Canada Centre)
May 10: Philadelphia (First Union Center)
May 12: Uncasville, Conn. (Mohegan Sun Arena)
May 13: New York (Madison Square Garden)
May 15: Boston (Tsongas Arena)
(Billboard)

Posted by hsjukebox at 12:44 PM GMT
Updated: Friday, 9 April 2004 1:22 PM BST
Thursday, 5 February 2004
Winwood, Richards, Garfunkel, Gabriel and more...
Mood:  loud
Now Playing: Various

Winwood Eyeing Rock Hall Traffic Reunion

After wrapping a just-underway European tour with the Funk Brothers, Steve Winwood will be back on the road with his own band for an eight-date U.K. trek that runs from March 1-10. He will then head to New York to perform with his former band, Traffic, at the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony.

Winwood is expected to be joined by fellow founding members Jim Capaldi (drums) and Dave Mason (bass) for the one-song performance, which looks likely to be of "Dear Mr. Fantasy." Later Traffic member Randall Bramblett will replace keyboardist Chris Wood, who died in 1983.

"I'm very pleased the many members of Traffic over the years have got a well-earned place on a wall in Cleveland," Winwood tells Billboard.com. "I'm very grateful to the powers that be for putting Traffic in this prestigious institution."

Meanwhile, an augmented version of Winwood's latest album, "About Time," will be released March 1 by Sanctuary internationally and his own Wincraft label in the U.S. The new version adds three bonus tracks: live versions of "Dear Mr. Fantasy" and "Why Can't We Live Together" recorded in Northampton, Mass., on his 2003 tour, plus a new studio version of "Voodoo Chile," associated with Winwood since he played keyboards on the Jimi Hendrix original in 1968.

Additionally, a live DVD from Traffic's most recent tour, in 1994, is planned for the end of April, featuring a guest performance by Jerry Garcia, one of the last live outings by the Grateful Dead member before his death the following year. (Billboard)


Your Inner Richards

A new fashion line by designer Michael Houghton - who has created custom clothes for Steven Tyler and Joe Perry of Aerosmith and some of the boys from Lynyrd Skynyrd - was inspired by the likes of David Bowie, Keith Richards and other bad ass rockers. The rock inspired collection will be unveiled in New York on February 8th. "It's all about clothes that will help bring out the inner Keith Richards in all of us," Michael says of his new line, which includes slick suits, punk-style denims and pieces made of alligator skin. Personally, I don't need an alligator jacket to communicate with my inner Richards - or my "little Keith" as I like to call him. (Arrow FM)

Art Garfunkel Fighting Charge

Art Garfunkel is apparently contesting a marijuana possession charge he faces in upstate New York. Settling the matter yesterday (Jan. 28) in Hurley, N.Y., could have been as easy as paying a $100 fine, but instead a judge set a Feb. 11 hearing after Garfunkel's attorney Michael Federoff appeared in court.

Federoff declined to discuss the case and a call to a publicist for Garfunkel was not immediately returned.

Garfunkel, 62, of Manhattan, was charged with marijuana possession Jan. 17 after state police stopped his limousine for speeding in Hurley, 55 miles southwest of Albany.

Police said a trooper smelled marijuana when he approached the limo and found 6 grams of marijuana in Garfunkel's jacket pocket. Garfunkel faces up to a $100 fine, unless he has had a criminal conviction in the past three years. Authorities won't say whether he has a prior record.

Garfunkel recently completed a U.S. concert tour with Paul Simon, their first in 20 years. As previously reported, Simon and Garfunkel have tentative plans to launch a summer leg of the tour. (Billboard)

Petty Rocks For AIDS

Tom Petty & The Heartbreakers will play a special concert in Orange County on Saturday, February 7. Arts for AIDS III: The Concert For Stephen will feature such guests as Cher, Carrie Fisher, Bob Dylan, Jackson Browne, Merv Griffin and Barry Garfunkel To Fight Marijuana ChargeManilow. The concert will be dedicated to the late Stephen Cy Costick, the brother of Petty's wife Dana, who passed from the disease in 1993. Art For AIDS III: The Concert For Stephen will take place at the beautiful St. Regis Monarch Beach Resort & Spa. (Arrow FM)

Gabriel, Eno Launch Musicians Alliance

Veteran rock artists Peter Gabriel and Brian Eno are launching a provocative new musicians' alliance that would cut against the industry grain by letting artists sell their music online instead of only through record labels.

With the Internet transforming how people buy and listen to songs, musicians need to act now to claim digital music's future, Gabriel and Eno argued Monday as they handed out a slim red manifesto at the Midem conference in Cannes, France.

They call the plan the "Magnificent Union of Digitally Downloading Artists" - or MUDDA, which has a less lofty ring to it. "Unless artists quickly grasp the possibilities that are available to them, then the rules will get written, and they'll get written without much input from artists," said Eno, who has a long history of experimenting with technology.

By removing record labels from the equation, artists can set their own prices and set their own agendas, said the two independent musicians, who hope to launch the online alliance within a month.

Their pamphlet lists ideas for artists to explore once they're freed from the confines of the CD format. One might decide to release a minute of music every day for a month. Another could post several recorded variations of the same song and ask fans what they like best.

Gabriel, who has his own label, Real World Records, said he isn't trying to shut down the record companies -- he just wants to give artists more options. "There are some artists who already tried to do everything on their own," he said, adding that those musicians often found out they didn't like marketing or accounting. "We believe there will be all sorts of models for this."

Gabriel previously co-founded a European company, On Demand Distribution, which runs legal download sites in 11 European countries. The company would provide the technology for MUDDA, though Gabriel and Eno are looking for online partners.

Because both legal and illegal digital download sites offer tunes a la carte, many in the industry believe they'll make albums less important by putting the focus on catchy singles. But Eno and Gabriel both suggested they'd welcome a chance to make songs that stand alone.

"I'm an artist who works incredibly slowly," Gabriel said. "If some of those [songs] could be made available, you don't have to be so trapped into this old way of being confined only by the album cycle."

Gabriel adds that he is interested in putting multiple versions of the same song online. He's also looking forward to being able to hear unfinished music from other artists. "We tend at the moment ... to try to find a moment when a song is right. You stick the pin in the butterfly and put it in the box and you sell the box," he said. "Music is actually a living thing that evolves." (Billboard)


Ireland's Hardest Rockers

St. Patrick's Day is not meant for Enya or even Annie Lennox. As talented as those Irish lasses may be, St. Patrick's a day for drinking and drinking calls for rocking and rocking calls for Irishmen like U2, Van Morrison or Thin Lizzy. So, with the greatest holiday in the world coming up, don't walk, but run and pick up Greatest Irish Bands, a new CD featuring songs from such acts hailing from the Emerald Isle. The set includes U2's "Where the Streets Have No Name," Van Morrison's classic "Brown-Eyed Girl" and Thin Lizzy's blistering cover of the pub ballad "Whiskey In The Jar." More importantly, the CD comes with a bonus DVD of the seven-minute short film Sightings of Bono, a student film about a girl who sees the U2 singer everywhere until she runs into him at a shop she works in. If you're not a fan of student films, watch it drunk!
(Arrow FM)

Posted by hsjukebox at 11:47 AM GMT
Friday, 30 January 2004
'We Will Rock You' to Pepsi
Mood:  energetic
Now Playing: Queen
If any classic rock song has made a lasting impression, it's definitely Queen's bombastic "We Will Rock You." Way after Freddie Mercury belted out the song in the mid-Seventies, generations have touted the song as a classic anthem. Queen's lasting power is especially apparent in a new Pepsi commercial which features pop superstars Beyonce Knowles, Britney Spears and Pink singing "We Will Rock You." The spot has the sexy trio dressed as gladiators while Enrique Iglesias stars at the Roman emperor. Queen guitarist Brian May and drummer Roger Taylor have produced a new version of the tune for the ad. May says, "It was fantastic that they wanted to use it. Britney, Beyonce, Pink singing a Queen track. It couldn't be more fun." Right, or more lucrative

Posted by hsjukebox at 10:37 AM GMT
Tommy To Albert Hall
Mood:  bright
Now Playing: The Who

The Who's performance of its 1969 rock opera "Tommy" will highlight a week of benefit concerts at London's Royal Albert Hall. Proceeds from the March 29-April 2 series will go to Teenage Cancer Trust, for which the Who's members have been outspoken advocates. The group's upcoming appearance had earlier been erroneously reported as part of the venue's 150-year anniversary.

"Teenagers with cancer are still discriminated against by the NHS [National Health Service]," singer Roger Daltrey says in a statement. "It is my mission, through these shows, to end this prejudice. Without teenagers, there would be no pop industry and it is about time they are recognized by the NHS as the distinct group of people that they are."

Other acts on tap for this year's series include the Stereophonics and guests on March 30, "The Cream of British Comedy" hosted by Alan Partridge on March 31, Jools Holland featuring David Gilmour, Solomon Burke, Marc Almond, Ruby Turner and Mica Paris on April 1 and Tom Jones and guests on April 2.

As previously reported, the Who will headline the 2004 edition of the U.K.'s Isle of Wight festival, to be held June 11-13. (Billboard)

Posted by hsjukebox at 10:33 AM GMT
Tuesday, 20 January 2004
Dylan 'Bootleg Series' Rolls On With 'Live 1964'
Mood:  lyrical

Bob Dylan enthusiasts will have plenty to celebrate on March 23, when Columbia/Legacy issues "Live 1964: Concert at Philharmonic Hall ... The Bootleg Series Volume 6." The 19-track, double-disc set is drawn from Dylan's Oct. 31, 1964, solo acoustic performance at New York's Philharmonic Hall, two months after the release of the album "Another Side of Bob Dylan."

At the show, Dylan previewed three cuts ("Mr. Tambourine Man," "Gates of Eden" and "It's Alright Ma (I'm Only Bleeding)") that wouldn't see the light of day until the March 1965 release of "Bringing It All Back Home." According to the label, the show constitutes the earliest all-acoustic Dylan concert to be officially released.



Joan Baez guests on four songs: "Mama, You Been on My Mind," a new arrangement of the traditional "Silver Dagger," "With God on Our Side" and "It Ain't Me, Babe."

"Live 1964" is bolstered with a 52-page booklet featuring unpublished photographs and an essay by Princeton University historian Sean Wilentz, who attend the concert as a 13-year-old. The albums comes on the heels of the November 2002 release of the fifth volume in the "Bootleg Series," which chronicled Dylan's 1975 Rolling Thunder Revue tour.

Dylan is up for three awards at the 2004 Grammys: best traditional soul gospel album for "Gotta Serve Somebody: The Gospel Songs of Bob Dylan"; best pop collaboration with vocals for "Gonna Change My Way of Thinking" from the same album; and best male rock vocal performance for "Down in the Flood" from the "Masked & Anonymous" soundtrack.

Here is the "Live 1964" track list:

Disc one:
"The Times They Are A-Changin'"
"Spanish Harlem Incident"
"Talkin' John Birch Paranoid Blues"
"To Ramona"
"Who Killed Davey Moore?"
"Gates of Eden"
"If You Gotta Go, Go Now (Or Else You Got To Stay All Night)"
"It's Alright Ma, (I'm Only Bleeding)"
"I Don't Believe You (She Acts Like We Never Have Met)"
"Mr. Tambourine Man"
"A Hard Rain's A-Gonna Fall"

Disc two:
"Talkin' World War III Blues"
"Don't Think Twice, It's All Right"
"The Lonesome Death of Hattie Carroll"
"Mama, You Been on My Mind"
"Silver Dagger"
"With God on Our Side"
"It Ain't Me, Babe"
"All I Really Want To Do"

-- Jonathan Cohen, N.Y (Billboard)

Posted by hsjukebox at 9:23 AM GMT
Monday, 5 January 2004
Pink Floyd takes top honors
Mood:  energetic
Now Playing: Best of the best!

Pink Floyd Classic Dark Side of the Moon is the big Winner at 2nd Annual Surround Music Awards, Wins Four Including Best of Show

Friday December 19, 2:46 pm ET
Led Zeppelin, Frank Zappa, 45th Annual Grammy Telecast Win Special Awards


LOS ANGELES, Dec. 19 /PRNewswire/ -- The surround remix of Pink Floyd's seminal album Dark Side of the Moon -- at one time, the longest continuously charting album in Billboard history -- won four trophies, including Best of Show, at the 2nd Annual Surround Music Awards, Thursday, December 11.
The gala event was held at the Beverly Hilton Hotel, in Beverly Hills, CA, during the 5th Annual Surround Conference & Showcase, and was hosted again this year by Grammy winners Al Schmitt and Ed Cherney.

The aspirations of a new generation of creative artists liberated from the constraints of the traditional two-channel delivery medium were given a thoughtful and articulate voice at the 2nd Annual Surround Music Awards in a special opening address by musician/composer/producer BT, whose musical score for the film Monster was conceived from the ground up in 5.1. Acknowledging the major problems inherent in today's recording industry -- overall lack of artistic control, cost cutting by the major labels, and rampant piracy -- BT pointed to surround as "a shining beacon of hope in an otherwise dark business." Composing in multichannel, he claimed, allowed him to achieve the quality of "spatiality" he had always admired in his musical heroes, from the likes of Stravinsky to Brian Eno. "Stereo is unnatural ... surround is the way I've always wanted to create music."

Special Awards and Performances

Special awards were presented to NARAS and Cossette Productions for the 45th Annual Grammy telecast, produced in 5.1, Led Zeppelin, Frank Zappa, and United Entertainment Media senior VP Martin Porter. Dweezil Zappa accepted the Surround Pioneer Award on behalf of his late father, and performed several songs in his honor.

"Frank's normal reaction to awards ceremonies in general would've been sarcastically dismissive," said Dweezil Zappa, upon accepting the award. "He wasn't fond of ego stroking. In the case of the Surround Pioneer award I believe he would have felt honored."

Led Zeppelin was named Surround Artist of the Year for its high-profile, self-titled DVD release, Led Zeppelin. In accepting the Surround Artist of the Year Award, Jimmy Page, through a prepared statement which was read at the ceremony, said "Surround sound is a fantastic way to experience music. So, in the 21st Century, armed with visuals and multitracks of various performances and modern technology, we set about presenting a chronological history of Led Zeppelin live in surround sound. It is a great honor to have our work recognized by engineers and producers whose work brings the music and listening pleasure to millions."

The 45th Annual Grammy telecast was given the Broadcast Landmark Award. Telecast producer John Cossette of Cossette Productions and Leslie Lewis, Director of The Recording Academy P&E Wing (representing Recording Academy President Neil Portnow) accepted the award from Herbie Hancock, himself an early promoter of surround music from the artistic community. Commenting on his first experience working with surround professionals, Cossette said he learned the key was to "give them the necessary spiritual and financial support and then get out of the way." Next year's Grammy Awards will again broadcast in surround and high-definition, according to Cossette.

Billboard magazine was the exclusive media sponsor of the Surround Music Awards. JBL was the technology sponsor. (2nd Annual Surround Music Awards)

Posted by hsjukebox at 12:49 PM GMT

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