December 23rd, 2007Trisha beats the tops!

As 2007 comes to a close, Nashville has much in common with Hollywood. Both are industry towns that celebrate rejuvenated veterans and young, blond divas.

This was the Year of the Comeback for several veteran acts. The Eagles released their first studio album since 1979, “Long Road Out of Eden,” which topped the country charts and has been certified triple platinum. Quasi-retired Garth Brooks returned to the concert stage and had a No. 1 single with “More Than a Memory.” Billy Ray Cyrus had his biggest hit since the late ’90s with “Ready, Set, Don’t Go,” a duet featuring his daughter Miley (better known to kids as TV’s Hannah Montana).

Three young, blond divas who each had a stellar year are Carrie Underwood, whose sophomore album, “Carnival Ride,” hit No. 1, even as her debut, “Some Hearts,” continued to rack up sales in excess of six million units; Taylor Swift, a chart-topping 18-year-old whose youthful appeal makes her one of the hottest acts in Nashville; and Miranda Lambert, a feisty singer-songwriter whose sophomore CD, “Crazy Ex-Girlfriend,” won over mainstream fans, alt-country listeners and quite a few pop critics.

Here are 10 things that made country music interesting in 2007.

BEST ALBUM: Trisha Yearwood’s “Heaven, Heartache and the Power of Love” is commercial country music at its finest. Her rendition of “The Dreaming Fields” (penned by Matraca Berg and Gary Harrison) ranks among the greatest recordings in Yearwood’s illustrious, 17-year career.

BEST CONCERT: Bluegrass trio Nickel Creek teamed up with Fiona Apple for a dazzling Aug. 10 show at Ravinia, creating a vivid memory for fans — who’ll miss the trio now that it’s on an indefinite hiatus.

BEST COMEDIC MOMENT:Kellie Pickler’s televised interview at Wrigley Field on June 12 may have been just a ditzy act, but her popcorn-fueled discussion of the differences between baseball and NASCAR was priceless.

BEST COLLABORATION: Alison Krauss and Led Zeppelin vocalist Robert Plant, under the guidance of producer T Bone Burnett, released the moody, mesmerizing “Raising Sand.”

BEST POST-BREAKUP SONG:”She Don’t Love Me” is the knife-in-the-heart highlight of Blake Shelton’s “Pure BS,” one of the best albums of the year.

BEST ARTIST WHO DESERVES A WIDER AUDIENCE:Patty Griffin received the Americana Music Association’s album of the year award for her brilliant “Children Running Through.”

BEST HIDDEN GEM: One of the year’s best country-rock albums is “Nashville Moon,” found in the “Sojourner” box set (four CDs and one DVD) by Magnolia Electric Co.

BEST MUSIC VIDEO: King Wilkie’s “Captivator” clip demonstrates that you don’t need a big budget to make a memorable video — but you gotta have a great song.

BEST HOLIDAY CD: Mindy Smith’s terrific “My Holiday” is bolstered by contributions from Chely Wright, who penned the jazzy “It Really Is (A Wonderful Life)” and collaborated with Smith on two other excellent tracks.

BEST DOUBLE ENTENDRES:Adults should check out “Let’s Duet” on the soundtrack to “Walk Hard: The Dewey Cox Story.”

With holiday tunes on the airwaves since the Thanksgiving turkey was carved, the American Society of Composers, Authors and Publishers recently announced its Top 25 most performed holiday songs for the past five years, based on performance data tracked by radio airplay monitoring service Mediaguide.

Among the 25 songs picked this year, more than half were composed, co-written or performed by Jewish artists.

Number one on the list is “The Christmas Song,” a classic Christmas song, written in 1944 by vocalist Mel Torm/ and Bob Wells, both of whom are Jewish.

According to Torm/, the song was written during a blistering hot summer. In an effort to “stay cool by thinking cool,” the most-performed (according to BMI) Christmas song was born.

The Nat King Cole Trio first recorded the song early in 1946. A second recording by Cole was made the same year utilizing a small string section, this version becoming a massive hit on both the pop and R&B charts. Cole’s original 1946 recording was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1974.

The song is typically subtitled with its opening line, “Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire”.”

The Nat King Cole Trio first recorded the song early in 1946. A second recording by Cole was made the same year utilizing a small string section, this version becoming a massive hit on both the pop and R&B charts. Cole’s original 1946 recording was inducted into the Grammy Hall of Fame in 1974.

The song is typically subtitled with its opening line, “Chestnuts Roasting on an Open Fire”.”

Irving Berlin’s “White Christmas” is another favorite and at No. 5 on this year’s list.

“White Christmas” is the historical “top star” of popular Christmas songs. Its incredible success inspired scores of other songwriters to try to write a Christmas song.

Berlin, one of the most famous songwriters in American history, was born Israel Baline in what is now Russia, or possibly Belarus.

He came to the States in 1891. His father is alternately reported to have been a cantor or rabbi, but didn’t work in either capacity when the family moved to America. His father’s death, when Irving was 13, forced the young composer to find work, even singing in the streets, just so he and his family could eat.

Berlin certainly never hid the fact that he was Jewish, even though he changed his name. He adopted “Berlin” because that was how his last name, Baline, was misspelled on the sheet music cover of his first published song.

Berlin was absolutely very much an American patriot and “God Bless America” was a sincere statement of his beliefs. The royalties to that song go to the Boys and Girls Scouts.

“Let It Snow! Let it Snow! Let it Snow!”

This song was written (1945) by the Jewish song writing team of lyricist Sammy Cahn (1913-1993) and music composer Jule Styne (1905-1994).

In the 1950s, probably half of all Americans would recognize the names of this song-writing duo.

Previews of coming movies would actually sometimes say that the film featured a Sammy Cahn/Jule Styne tune, and that tune would usually end up high on the “hit parade.”

Cahn won the Oscar for best song four times: once with Styne, and three times with composer Jimmy Van Heusen, who wasn’t Jewish.

Cahn was born Sammy Cohen on the Lower East Side of New York, the son of Polish Jewish immigrants. He changed his name from Cohen to Kahn to Cahn, to avoid being confused with a popular entertainer of the day with a similar name and, then, a songwriter with a similar name.

Styne was born in London, England to Jewish parents from the Ukraine. His family moved to Chicago when he was 8.

Read full story: http://blog.mp3adrenalin.com/2007/12/23/wonderful-songs-of-the-holiday-season/

… and we continue. This is TOP 20 songs of 2007 y.

20. Hot Club de Paris - Clockwork Toy
Kept coming back to this song over the others. I liked the perpetuallness of the sound as a whole. Not as fun as some of their other stuff, but better.

19. Good Charlotte - I Don’t Wanna be in Love
There’s a lot to hate about this song. The (Dance Floor Anthem) qualifier. The “but most suckas hate it” lyric. But man is there a lot of things working here too. Safe to say this is the best thing Good Charlotte has ever done. I absolutely hated with a passion their early stuff like “Lifestyles of the Rich and Famous.” Maybe more than maybe any band ever. But this is, overall, some really good stuff.

18. Maccabees - X-Ray
Quietly turned out to be one of my top 5 albums of the year. Still one of my go-to albums 10 months after first hearing it. This is the best track on the album, tho I could probably make a case for 6 or 7 of them.

17. The Shins - Australia
Another overlooked album based on principal. These guys had no chance after Garden State, but you know what? They held their own and put out a pretty cool record. This is one of the better Smiths ripoff songs I’ve heard in recent years.

16. Bright Eyes - Cleanse Song
Haven’t listened to this album in a few months, but this song makes me wanna go back and get back into it again, cause I really loved it the first time through. This was the album-stopping track for me. Great imagery.

15. Nakatomi Plaza - A Manifest Destiny Grows In Brooklyn
I loved this record. Top 5 of the year, maybe. This opening track is a killer…vintage Rainer Maria. Wish more people listened to them cause I think there’s a pretty big audience out there that’d be into what they’ve got to offer.

14. Black Kids - I’m Not Gonna Teach Your Boyfriend How to Dance With You
You know, drop all the hype and nonsense and these guys have exactly 2 excellent songs. There’s no way around that. This one is the better of them. Someday, they will be a footnote on the Wikipedia entry for “2000’s Indie Rock” as the band that finally killed the blogrock trend, but for now we can just enjoy this jam and worry about the consequences later.

13. Of Montreal - Heimdalsgate Like a Promethean Curse
This album was greater than the sum of its parts. There are some songs that stood out, but the whole thing was what made it so great. This was the first song I remember hearing off the record where I was like “whoh, we’ve got something special here.”

12. Plain White T’s - Hey There Delilah
I hated this band so much when I saw them perform that “I don’t hate you, but I really really really don’t like you” song (actual lyrics) on TV once. But their placement on the emusic top 10 taunted me for long enough that I finally had some extra credits and gave it a shot. Turns out this song is quite a burner. A bit corny, for sure, but catchy and endearing enough to work on me.

11. Maximo Park - Books from Boxes
I loved the last Maximo Park album, but didn’t listen to this one much. BfB was a major standout track, but the rest was quickly forgotten.

10. GladOS (Portal) - Still Alive
(Portal Spoilers ahead, for anyone who is planning on playing it wait on reading this.) Every geeky gamer owes it to themselves to have this in their top 10. Imagine the roller coaster of emotions, playing a 2 hour long puzzle game, until suddenly (SPOILERS) you’re thrust from the game world, trying to escape the lab the game had previously been contained in. After another adventure that lasts almost half as long as the entire 18 levels previously, you defeat the boss that had been directing/taunting you the entire game, and the last moment is you, dead on your side, but aboveground in the real world. You destroyed the system, at the expense of your life. Bittersweet, but satisfying.

9. Vampire Weekend - Oxford Comma
I hated these guys on principal until I actually saw them live and heard their songs. Turns out, they’re goofy college rock! And awesome! If the Black Kids killed blog rock, Vampire Weekend handed them the rifle. If a band that sounds like this can get pretentious music fans on board, then there’s really nothing left to argue about.

8. Band of Horses - No One’s Gonna Love You
Such a great song. Loved hearing it on Chuck a few weeks ago. Band of Horses is good for 1 amazing song off each album, which pushes the album of otherwise above average tracks to an overall great listen. Kinda like that one kid who throws off the class curve. The Funeral was that track last year, and this is the one for 2007.

7. Black Lips - Hippy Hippy Hurrah
This is barely even a song. One epic guitar sequence and a lot of incomprehensible mumbling. But it’s so great, isn’t it? simple, effective. Good beyond explanation.

6. Kings of Leon - McFearless
Kings of Leon are good for at least one amazing song of the year contender per album. Their last two albums have been really solid overall too, but this is just a different level. Surprised they don’t have more mainstream traction. What about this would a Nickelback fan not like?

5. Feist - My Moon My Man
This was the Feist song in an ad you saw every 5 seconds before that was cool. Aside from being an impossibly catchy jam that could have been a late 90’s Jennifer Lopez supersmash in a different life, it provides a perfect speedwalking pace. I’ve never been late to work while listening to this song.

4. T-Pain/Cloud Cult - Collide You a Drank
Better than both originals by far. How they’re able to make those CC hooks work 100x better than they already were is incredible. Taking the rest of the world’s song of the year and mashing it up with one of my favorite bands of the decade is a special thing. Hood Internet is genius.

3. Pinback - Good to Sea
Silly puns aside, I love this song. The last Pinback album had remarkable lasting power, and while this one didn’t quite stick with me like I hoped it would, this song sure did. One of my most listened individual tracks of the year.

2. Tegan and Sara - Nineteen
For the rest of my life, if I ever hear the phrase “I felt you in my legs, before I ever met you” shout out at me from a jukebox, I’ll think of 2007. Fondly. Brilliant song. The best by far from one of the only albums this year that actually mattered to me.

1. Paramore - Misery Business
I was pretty high on this song already, but it jumped to all time fav territory once I read Hayley’s livejournal explaining the history behind it. This is the best song of the year.

HAPPY NEW YEAR! Hope you will stay with us in the 2008!!

The Rock and Roll Hall of Fame’s 2008 inductees have been chosen. They include Madonna, John Mellencamp, the Dave Clark Five, the Ventures and Leonard Cohen. Also being inducted are Little Walter in the sideman category and producers Kenny Gamble and Leon Huff in the non-performer category. The 2008 Rock and Roll Hall of Fame induction ceremony will take place in New York on March 10, 2008.

On December 12, 76-year-old guitarist and rock pioneer Ike Turner died at his home in San Marcos, California. The controversial legend hired Tina Turner (real name Anna Mae Bullock) in the late 1950s to front his band the Kings of Rhythm. Ike and Tina’s hits include “Proud Mary,” “It’s Gonna Work Out Fine” and “Nutbush City Limits.” Tina divorced Ike in 1976 and wrote about the abusive relationship in her 1986 autobiography, “I, Tina.” They were inducted into the Rock and Roll Hall of Fame in 1991. Ike was in prison at that time serving a sentence for cocaine possession charges. Following Ike’s death, the Recording Academy released a statement that said, “There is no doubt that Ike Turner was one of rock and roll’s great architects with his genre-defying sound as an instrumentalist and bandleader. His innovative musicality helped lay the foundation for rock n’ roll and R&B more than 50 years ago. As a bandleader, his well-rehearsed ensembles were some of the most exciting live groups the world had ever heard. As a two-time Grammy Award winner and recipient of The Recording Academy’s 2004 Heroes Award, Ike’s legacy as a groundbreaking pioneer in the music industry will never be forgotten.”

Toxicology reports show that 52-year-old Kevin DuBrow, singer for the hard rock group Quiet Riot, died of an accidental cocaine overdose. DuBrow was found dead on November 25 at his home in Las Vegas. Quiet Riot is best known for its 1983 Top 5 hit, “Cum On Feel The Noize.”

19-year-old Dancing With The Stars champion Julianne Hough will have a Country album released in early 2008. She was recently signed to Mercury Records in Nashville and will begin work on the album in January. Earlier this year, Julianne’s first single, “Will You Dance With Me,” was released on iTunes.

The Backstreet Boys’ Howie Dorough married his longtime girlfriend Leigh Boniello on December 8. The ceremony took place in Orlando, Florida. Dorough proposed to Boniello last New Year’s Eve. He says, “She wasn’t expecting it, and I was quite nervous - more nervous about proposing to her in front of 40 family and friends than about performing in front of 40,000 people onstage.” The Backstreet Boys’ latest album, Unbreakable, was released in October of this year. Beginning in February, the group will perform overseas shows in Japan, Australia and Europe.

Fergie came in at first and fifth place in single sales. Her hit “Big Girls Don’t Cry” was the top-selling single of the year for iTunes, while “Glamorous” finished in fifth. Gwen Stefani’s “The Sweet Escape” came in second place, followed by Plain White T’s “Hey There Delilah” and Avril Lavigne’s “Girlfriend.”

Music is like perfume: you can’t really buy it for someone unless you test drive it first. Well, I’ve done some test driving for you, and hopefully found some songs and albums that will instantly make you think of that stubborn friend or relative who doesn’t realize what they are missing. And, in my opinion, there is no cooler gift than turning someone on to a brand new song that they can’t live without.

Another problem with buying music for someone else is that people don’t like to wait for their favorite artists’ music. They buy it online as soon as it’s released. But, some of my favorite songs have stripped down, acoustic versions, or live versions that seem to capture the song perfectly. There are so many cool versions of songs available to the public with a little digging.

There are plenty of cool possibilities when gifting music, and half the fun is in the discovery. Happy listening!

December 7th, 2007Cinderella song - Yael Naim

When Yael Naim was a little girl, studying at the Ramat Hasharon Conservatory of Music, she saw “Amadeus” and decided that by age 30 she would write a symphony. “I’ve got one year left,” she says now. But she may not manage to fulfill the goal she set for herself then. It’s all the fault of the old vinyl records she discovered not long afterward - Aretha Franklin and the Beatles altered her plans. “I loved playing that kind of music so much that as soon as I finished my homework I would sit down and compose.”

In the first song on her new album, she sings (in Hebrew): “I ran away to another place, so fast, as far as I could go, and I’m in Paris.” Which is just what happened in real life. A few months after her discharge from the army, she came here and began to make music. Yet this doesn’t quite explain how “Yael Naim,” a record made by a young Israeli woman and sung mostly in Hebrew, instantly became the biggest-selling album over the Internet in France and is now in third place in in-store sales in stores, having sold about 60,000 copies in a month.

Naim was born in Paris 29 years ago but moved with her family to Ramat Hasharon at age four. Her father is an artist and her mother is a cosmetician. She has two brothers in Israel - one is a deejay and the other is an accountant. When she was a child, she would spend hours at the piano her father bought for her, and she began attending the conservatory at age nine. When she was a high-school student in the music track at the Yigal Allon School, she went to see the jazz great Wynton Marsalis at the Camelot Club in Tel Aviv and met a saxophone player from his orchestra who had settled in Israel. He recognized her talent and every month, when he appeared at the club, he brought her onto the stage to sing jazz standards.

The next stop, of course, was an army musical troupe. Naim sang as a soloist with the air force troupe, starting in 1996. “Even though it was the army, it was pleasant,” she says. During her service, she was sent by the army to sing at a benefit concert in Paris. The organizers noticed her voice and took note of her name.

When she got out of the army, she was sent to another benefit concert in Paris. After performing a few songs at the piano she was approached by French producers who wanted to hear more. “I always had drafts of songs with me,” says Naim. “They just happened to be looking for someone for a musical project and when they heard what I do, they were all excited and offered me a contract.” Israeli recording companies had not been very enthusiastic about the music she made with her band, “The Anti Collision,” but four days after landing in Paris, at the age of 21, Yael Naim had a recording contract with EMI.

Naim returned to Israel, packed a suitcase and went back to Paris. “I didn’t know what would happen, I had a boyfriend in Israel, I thought I’d stay for a few months to record and then return to Israel.” But the work on the album took over a year, and something else happened: The French-Jewish director Elie Chouraqui saw her perform and offered her a role in a musical production of “The Ten Commandments” that he was staging, and the show was a big success.

She continued working on her first album, with recording sessions in Paris and Los Angeles, where her producer lived. “In a Man’s Womb” was released in 2001, but despite the best efforts by her and EMI, it did not do well. The songs got no radio play and no one bought the album. “The album came out when I was appearing in the musical and the music on the record was so different that it created a dissonance,” she tries to explain. “I was also very young. I didn’t have patience and I became disappointed very quickly. It was a time of growing up, and I also was trying to maintain my relationship with my boyfriend back in Israel, which made the whole thing that much harder.”

The failure “shook me up and made me doubt myself,” she says. And then she broke up with her boyfriend of five years. “I felt awful: I’d left everything for this record and it didn’t succeed the way I wanted.”

Her Cinderella story was coming undone. She describes a time of confusion, of major success and major failure all mixed together: “On the one hand I began seeing reality as it was, but on the other I’d also tasted success with the musical that exceeded all expectations. But it’s one thing when you’re succeeding with music that someone else created, and something else entirely when you’re succeeding by virtue of something that you have created. I may have earned a lot of money and fame, but the personal-emotional element was missing, and that doesn’t bring happiness.”

So you weren’t happy with your success?

“It can also be confusing, when success comes when you’re too young, it can suddenly cut you off from reality.”

What did you do?

“As always, I wrote songs. Some people cook or play sports. This is what I love to do. Sometimes I can’t express myself that well in talk, so I write songs.”

After the failure of the first album, Naim took part in several projects with other artists, and then returned to the stage, to another musical directed by Chouraqui - “Gladiator.” For a time, she put away her ambitions of making her own music. She still played piano, but only as an accompanist to a friend who was a singer. At one of these concerts, she met David Donatien, a West Indian drummer. They began playing together and Naim got up the nerve to let him hear some of her songs. “I was very impressed,” says Donatien, 36. He tries to explain Naim’s previous failure: “Yael worked then with producers and arrangers and it blocked her music from really coming out. She didn’t find Yael in the music that she herself created. People didn’t realize what a complete artist she is: composer, writer, singer and arranger. They thought of her as just a voice that produces sounds. She lost herself in the whole thing. I told her she could do it all by herself.”

Among the 200 or so songs Naim played for Donatien, nearly all in English and French, there were a few in Hebrew. Why would someone who wants to develop a career in France write in Hebrew? “I was homesick,” Naim explains. “When I’d go to Israel, I felt like a tourist. My social and professional ties had started to dissolve, and it confused me. I didn’t know whether I should stay here in Paris or go back to Isarel, or even cut off all my ties with Israel so I could really plant roots here. Or maybe go somewhere else altogether. I felt a need to express myself during this time in Hebrew, in the language that is closest to me.”

It was these songs that excited Donatien: “I told her that this is what she should be doing. Because this is her identity, who she really is. She has to be who she is. I told her, ‘These are the songs you will sing!’”

Three years of working together and recording in the living room of her apartment in the Eleventh Arrondissement led to her latest, eponymous album. Even though it bears Naim’s name and photograph, she insists that it is the work of two people and that without Donatien, her producer and artistic director, it never would have seen the light of day.

You talk about a multiplicity of styles, but actually the album is quite minimalist.

“My first album was full of ideas and attempts to go in all kinds of directions. I was young. I loved making music but I didn’t have a clear path. I also lacked in confidence. David told me to be more ‘naked,’ to expose myself in a more personal way, to build the songs around the emotion, with the guitar and my voice. He showed me that you don’t have to pile too much on, but rather just work on the really necessary things. We spent long months working just on the skeleton of the songs, and then we delicately dressed them.”

As the sales attest, the result was a success. In France, albums in exotic languages such as Hebrew are usually marketed as “world music.” But this album is surprising not only because it’s selling in the rock or pop departments of music stores, but because its songs, including the ones in Hebrew, are being played on the most popular radio stations. Since its release, over six weeks ago, Naim and Donatien have become a frequent presence on French television. The video clip for the song “New Soul” has been aired about a thousand times (and apparently gave the record its first big push), and the pair has been invited to nearly every talk show. Later this month they will be guests on the “Star Academy” program, the local version of “American Idol.”

The album contains 13 tracks that range from pop to folk to melancholy ballads. The sound is clean, without sampling or electronic motifs. Naim reminds some people (in her sound as well as her look) of Norah Jones, or Tori Amos. The star attraction: her soft and warm voice, which has won accolades across the board. Critics have called it “hypnotic,” “magical” and “of rare purity,” while also mentioning Naim’s “brunette beauty.” (Her large, bright eyes are admittedly hard to resist, as is the smile that never seems to leave her face.)

Thanks to the rave reviews and her frequent television appearances, all the tickets for a three-week concert tour that ends tomorrow sold out well over a week ago. Additional dates have already been added for March, April and May. When asked to explain her huge success among the French, she just asks: “Where are all these people coming from?”

You really don’t know?

“It’s not the success that’s making me feel like my life is changing completely. We also don’t really get the sales data that’s reported to us. At first, there was mostly a sense of relief. You say to yourself: ‘Okay, it looks like things are going to be alright.’ Since I’ve had the opposite experience, when you’ve been told before that radio stations don’t want to play your music, that you should wait a few more months, I could really appreciate the speed and ease with which this record succeeded. And from that moment, when I suddenly had this feeling of peace, this sense that evidently things are going to be fine, I’ve just felt surprised all the time and am always asking myself: How can this be?”

Read full story: http://blog.mp3adrenalin.com/2007/12/07/cinderella-song-yael-naim/

Even though Moss Park dance punk duo MSTRKRFT believe that, as dance music artists, “there’s much better places for us to be,” (this is said right at the 4:16 mark, of all times) Toronto’s other homegrown house producers have taken the entire electro world by storm in the last few months. One needs only to point one’s browser to the website Beatport, which has quickly become the DJ world’s number one website for downloading high-bitrate dance music, and look on the “Top Downloads” panel on the lower right. In that period of time, there has been at least one track by a Toronto-based artist on the Top 10, and in the last five months, at least one Ontarian (if you include Windsor-raised Richie Hawtin, a.k.a. Plastikman.) Here is a brief look at three Toronto artists who have been conquering dancefloors around the world with their popular tracks on Beatport:

Multiple Juno Award-winning Hatiras’ breakthrough track “Spaced Invader” was hardly the beginning, but since then, Hatiras has been jamming in the studio, running Hatrax Records and Blow Media, showcasing brand new music with his weekly radio show Hatiras Presents, and selling dance chart topping tunes on Beatport like a machine. At least one of his latest smash hits “Bass Monkeys,” “Gutter Music,” or “Poppin’ Beats,” whose launch party was A.D/D.’s RANDOMLAND at CiRCA less than two weeks ago, will be playing on a soundsystem near you in the near future, guaranteed.

The eyes of the world turned to Toronto late last year when they began to watch the rising star Deadmau5. This summer, in the week of August 26, 2007, Deadmau5 had five tracks in the Top 10 on Beatport, making him one of the singularly most successful Beatport artists of all time. Through his label mau5trap, he has released banging tracks like “I Thought Inside Out” (with Chris Lake), “Complications” and “Desynchronised.” While it seems like Deadmau5 would have trouble keeping himself in the city for long enough to record new chart toppers with his frequent appearances in Europe and Japan, there is no shortage of his new techy beats for DJ’s to devour.

Jelo has been a mainstay of Toronto’s club scene for over a decade, with residencies at some of the city’s most famous hotspots. A few months ago, Los Angeles-based DJ Dan, sometimes called the world’s number one house DJ, spun an unreleased track by Jelo and Deadmau5 called “The Reward is Cheese” to kick off his set at Opulent Temple, the largest soundsystem camp at Burning Man. Cue November 19, 2007, when the track was released on the label Rising Trax. “The Reward is Cheese” instantly soared to number one on Beatport. His latest tune “Darke,” featuring a remix by D.A.V.E. The Drummer, is poised for party domination.

It is incredibly rare for any artist in their lifetime to record a Top 10 track, but even rarer for them to be from Toronto. These tunes are currently blasting out of speakers somewhere in the world, bringing the sound of our city to the ears of millions.

Swerve Festival announced its initial lineup taking place September 28-30, including three premieres of independent feature films, plus screenings of additional short films and music videos. The FUEL TV initiative will also present a dynamic series of activities including free musical performances and art installations at the festival’s primary venue - the Barnsdall Art Park in Hollywood.

“Swerve Festival isn’t just a film festival or a music festival or an art show-it’s all of these things,” says Jonathan Wells, Festival Director. “There’re no sidebars, all of our programs feature top-notch talent that stand on their own, yet are more cohesive as a whole. One of the trademarks of West Coast creative culture is the cross pollination of creative disciplines-art, music and film are interrelated and overlapping. This is the first festival to celebrate that.”

Read full story: http://blog.mp3adrenalin.com/2007/08/30/initial-lineup-announced-by-swerve-festival/

August 27th, 2007Video clips or pure sound

For years, this specific music lovers’ lament has been leaking into a culture-wide complaint about the adverse effect of music videos on attention spans, race relations, sexuality and almost every conceivable issue related to teenage delinquency.

In the 1980s and ’90s, the restless, flickering imagery of MTV became virtually synonymous with attention deficit disorders. And the targeted bombardment of hormonally unbalanced teenage boys with a measured supply of bikini-clad babes aroused as much conservative ire as adolescent desire. But maybe it’s worth looking at the issue from another angle: from the point of view, for instance, of the art world.

Read full story: http://blog.mp3adrenalin.com/2007/08/27/video-clips-or-pure-sound/

August 24th, 2007Tarzan boy

Tarzan Boy, released in the summer of 1985, was a huge success for Baltimora, debuting in the top 5 not only on the charts of their native Italy but also on the charts of many other European countries including Germany. In August of 1985, the single reached #3 in the UK and found a similar success even in the USA (via EMI), with the single remaining on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for six months and ultimately peaking at #13 in the early spring of 1986.

Baltimora is often considered a one hit wonder since none of their songs came close to the international success of their first single, Tarzan Boy. The single Tarzan Boy bounced back into the Billboard Hot 100 chart in the spring of 1993 as a remix, climbing to #51 thanks to its appearance in the movie Teenage Mutant Ninja Turtles III. The frontman of Baltimora Jimmy McShane died of AIDS on 29 March 1995.


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