January 20th, 2008LET'S DANCE!

Music festivals are rare in this part of the world. And dance music festivals? Well, Singapore has had ZoukOut for years and Malaysia hosts Global Gathering Recharge Revolution, but now the time has come for Bangkok to enjoy its first full-blown international dance music festival.

Bacardi B-Live Presents Culture One Bangkok International Dance Music Festival (try and read that really fast in one go) will make dance music enthusiasts’ dreams come true this Saturday at Bitec’s helicopter port when more than 25 artists take turns to demolish the dance floors.

“We are hoping that the festival will become an annual gathering for all music lovers like the ones held in our neighbouring countries. Bangkok is a major city and it needs a proper dance music festival. But this is only our first, and we’re trying our best to make it enjoyable for everyone involved, from the artists and staff to the revellers,” said organiser deejay Tui, founder of Club Culture and long-time patron of the club scene.

There will be four separate arenas sprawled around the lake of Bitec’s helicopter port. These are the Main Arena, the Amnesia Arena, the Godskitchen Arena and the Dudesweet Arena.

Headlining the Main Arena will be none other than deejay David Morales whose label, the legendary Def Mix, has chosen to include the festival as part of its 20th anniversary world tour. Def Mix deejays are loved by hard-core dance music fans the world over while its three flagship deejays/producers/artists - Morales, Frankie Knuckles and Satoshi Tomiie - have worked with everyone from Madonna to Diana Ross. Morales is said to be one of the first “superstar” deejays and his many remixes have transformed pop hits into dance floor-friendly tracks.

“We are quite proud that Def Mix has chosen to come to our festival. They could have gone anywhere for this anniversary tour. It will be David Morales’ first time in Thailand as well,” said deejay Tui.

But Morales won’t be the only pioneer featured in the Main Arena. Break beat luminaries Stanton Warriors will get some different juices flowing while Singapore’s living legend Andrew Chow will shake the dance floor with one of his booty jumping sets that can incorporate everything from old school hip hop to nu jazz. Sound-element crew are also on the bill to add some Thai-style break beats while deejay Spydamonkee will do the same for hip hop.

The Amnesia Arena will specialise in trance and electro house. For those who haven’t been to Ibiza or are uninformed about the world of trance and techno, Amnesia is one of the biggest clubs on Ibiza. It was recently recognised as Best Global Club by the Winter Music Conference in Miami. Now, your chance has come to get a taste of the Spanish party island through Marco V (who is ranked 20th in DJ Mag’s 2007 best deejays list), Brian Cross and Toni Varga alongside our very own deejay Oum, who isn’t actually Amnesia material but what the heck!

For progressive trance and psytrance heads, the Godskitchen Arena will scratch your itch big time. One of a few international super-club brands, Gods-kitchen has toured and organised events around the world with their rotation of famous deejays. Godskitchen also runs a music label and AIR, an infamous night club in Birmingham. Gatecrasher resident deejay AJ Gibson will play the Godskitchen Arena as will multi-talented old hand John 00 Fleming, one of very few deejays whose compilations sell over one million copies.

“It might sound like an exaggeration but John 00 Fleming is really one of the most important people in electronic music. He’s done many things from hosting a radio show to running his own label,” said deejay Tui.

Not to be outstaged is Thailand’s own deejay Sabai Sabai whose shaggy appearance may belie the fact that the hippyish decksmaster spends half of his year holding residencies in European clubs.

Last but not least is the Dudesweet Arena. The notorious party collective might stick out like a sore thumb at Culture One since their sound will be far removed from the hard dance of the other three arenas. Heedless, Dudesweet have gone ahead and cobbled their own arena party together.

“The festival has been really good toward us,” said Dudesweet head honcho Pongsuang Kunprasop. “They understand what we are about. Tui and his staff never interfere with our selections. They pretty much let us do whatever we want, including decorations and schedules. We feel very happy working with them.”

Dudesweet’s headliner might not be a household name in Bangkok, but the Filthy Dukes are gallivanting around Europe with their eclectic remixes and unpredictable, indietronica deejay sets. The Dukes, Olly Dixon and Tim Lawton run London’s famous club night, Kill ‘Em All, which has long been first to host cutting edge new bands who have gone on to make names for themselves. Hip would be an understatement for this duo. Trust Dudesweet to bring you the cool stuff!

Also present at the Dudesweet Arena will be Xu from Twilight Action Girl, Dudesweet’s Malaysian counterpart, and a special guest, namely Dome Pakorn Lum, whose identity was initially going to be kept as a surprise.

Dudesweet will be the only arena to host live bands including Cyndi Seui and Slur, set to rock ‘n’ roll with their short, energetic performances.

“We normally play rock or pop music festivals or with other bands with similar sounds, so this will be a nice change for us,” said Yeah, Slur’s vocalist. “We also frequent Dudesweet anyway and we think it’s fitting that they have live bands on their stage for they always support new bands in their regular events.”

In addition to music, there will also be an art exhibition at Culture One featuring 10 new artists and specially commissioned Thai contemporary dance performances.

“We want to make it a wholesome festival so we are including other fan factors such as games area and foot massage services. So even if you don’t feel like dancing, you can come and soak up the atmosphere,” said Tui.

The organisers are mildly concern that people might mistake the event for a big night out, thereby showing up late and missing some of what’s on offer. Well, people, the festival is starting at 4pm and the first deejays will be manning the decks no later than 5pm, so if you’re used to your Bangkok ways and show up after midnight consider yourself lucky if you catch more than one deejay!

Bacardi B-Live Presents Culture One Bangkok International Dance Music Festival is this Saturday from 4pm at Bitec’s helicopter port, Bang Na. Advance tickets through http://www.thaiticketmajor.com/ cost 650 baht, which includes one drink, or 850 baht at the door. Visit http://www.culture-one-bkk.com/ for more information and maps.

“American Idol” launches its seventh season on Fox tonight, but newbie vocalists vying for prime time’s biggest prize may be troubled by recent news. It seems that the days of winning “Idol” and automatically becoming one not only are long gone, but were a mirage in the first place.

Last week, Taylor Hicks, who won season 5, was dropped by his record label after selling 699,000 copies of his 2006 debut, which disappointed Arista. Soon after that, his runner-up, Katharine McPhee - who didn’t quite hit the 400,000 mark with her RCA release - was also shown the door. Add to that list season 2 victor Ruben Studdard, who got the boot from J Records late last year. (All three recorded for subsidiary imprints ofBMG, which has contractual first dibs on “Idol” contestants.)

Of course, if being a finalist on “Idol” was all it took to become a pop star, then first season runner-up Justin Guarini would have enjoyed at least as much success as Chris Daughtry, who was season 5’s fourth-place finisher but who also had one of the best-selling albums of 2007.

But television viewers, many of whom simply enjoy “Idol” as a silly midweek diversion, are not always music consumers. Even if they were, the song is king in pop music. Millions of people may have voted for both Guarini and Daughtry, but only the latter had songs that connected with a mass audience. Even prior success is no key to continued popular em brace or record-label sponsorship. Season 1 winner Kelly Clarkson’s recent third record underperformed commercially, thanks to a dearth of radio catnip like “Since U Been Gone.” Studdard saw a pattern of diminishing returns in urban soul and gospel music.

The true power of “Idol” isn’t in creating pop stars - always a complicated equation - but rather in molding reality-TV personalities who are, briefly, offered a window to capture people’s attention.

That some of the “Idol” winners and also-rans are able to open that window and step onto the red carpet of music, theater, film, or television instead of into a Red Lobster uniform - Clarkson, Daughtry, Carrie Underwood, and Oscar winner Jennifer Hudson - should cheer the more driven among this year’s crop. Even if the 2008 champ doesn’t end up selling millions of records, from a percentage standpoint, being on “Idol” is still better than not being on “Idol.”

Of the 60-plus finalists from the past six years, more than one-third have cobbled together some professional afterlife. There have been the ultimate chart-scaling heights of Clarkson, Underwood, and Daughtry, and lower-profile pop, gospel, and country hits from folks such as Elliott Yamin, Studdard, and Kellie Pickler, respectively. Broadway shows and national touring companies have been deluged with former competitors, including Constantine Maroulis, Diana DeGarmo, and Latoya London. Some have worked as headliners at small clubs, county fairs, and rodeos; others have gone on soap operas or other reality television shows.

Maybe Hudson’s work oncruise ships would’ve led to an audition for “Dreamgirls,” but we’re guessing that national television exposure helped to put that Oscar onto her mantel. Perhaps shy bank teller Lakisha Jones or gawky Clay Aiken, who had worked with special-needs children, might have ended up with featured roles in Broadway shows, but neither was seriously pursuing that career. (Jones recently signed on to “The Color Purple,” which has also featured season 3 winner Fantasia Barrino, and Aiken is joining “Spamalot” in a starring role.)

Hicks, McPhee, and Studdard all have projects on the horizon, too. Sony BMG has offered to consider Hicks’s next album, McPhee is appearing in several films, and Studdard will be headlining a revival of the Fats Waller musical “Ain’t Misbehavin’ ” alongside another former “Idol” contestant, Frenchie Davis.

The fact that many people still know Davis’s name and those of Sanjaya, non-contestant William Hung, and, sadly, current “Rehab” participant Jessica Sierra further underscores a crucial point. Singing talent or no, “Idol” isn’t so different from “The Real World” and “Survivor” in churning out short-term bold-facers.

“Idol” itself recognizes the hunger for these people. A new feature of the 2008 season is a “Where are they now?” segment. Maybe we’ll find out just what Guarini has been up to.

In recent interviews, acerbic British judge Simon Cowell has noted that one way to sidestep the minuscule dip in viewership that afflicted the 2007 season is to focus on the warbler’s personalities and back stories. There hasn’t been as much discussion of improving ratings - or record sales - by recruiting, you know, better singers.

So whether they want to sell records or host infomercials, this year’s wannabes better bring the drama as well as the charisma and the melisma.

January 18th, 2008Sour CREEM

Doesn’t matter that director Cameron Crowe — a former CREEM and Rolling Stone journalist whose semiautobiographical screenplay won an Oscar — presented a fairly Disney-ized portrait of the rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle of that era. It generally takes a sanitized sweetener to reach the mainstream, and, after Almost Famous, one could refer to both the late Lester Bangs and, by association, CREEM Magazine as “legendary” without fear of being ridiculed.

Jim DeRogatis — whose 2000 Let It Blurt biography of the, um, legendary rock critic got the ball rolling when it was published to much fanfare several months before the film debuted — moderated a panel about CREEM at the 2001 South by Southwest music conference in Austin, Texas, which, by many accounts, was the most anticipated and popular of the entire festival. DeRogatis mentioned an interview he’d recently done with Marianne Faithfull during which all she wanted to discuss was how much she loved Lester Bangs (who got the biggest ovation of the panel when his image appeared on a video screen). Bangs’ closest high school friend later told DeRogatis that he’d watched Faithfull on The Ed Sullivan Show with Lester in 1964 and marveled in retrospect: “If you’d have told us that in the future, there’d be a book and a movie about Lester, and that the girl on TV singing ‘As Tears Go By’ would be talking about him in interviews, we’d have thought you were mad.”

Just more proof that life truly is what happens to you while you’re busy making other plans, as someone else so eloquently put it. Despite any qualms one might have about Crowe’s film, Philip Seymour Hoffman did a wonderful job portraying at least one endearing aspect of the complicated Bangs persona — namely, “the kind mentor,” a role Bangs served to many fledgling writers over the years. Even if Bangs’ work — which currently fills two published anthologies, neither of which have gone out of print — should someday seem too antiquated for modern tastes, Almost Famous guarantees that, thanks to celluloid, Lester Bangs (and, by association, CREEM magazine) is now immortal.

Of course, CREEM was considered “legendary” by many of us long before the Crowe film; some of us knew it was “legendary,” if only subconsciously, when we were first reading it as kids. And that legendary status doesn’t just hinge on those facets that are now cemented to the legend, such as the now-famous underground cartoonist R. Crumb’s Boy Howdy! logo and covers. Or critic “Metal” Mike Saunders’ first use of the term “heavy metal” and co-founding editor Dave Marsh coining the term “punk rock” in its pages. Or Kurt Cobain telling an interviewer at the height of Nirvana’s fame that he’d learned everything he knew about punk rock from reading CREEM magazine as a kid.

No, you knew “America’s Only Rock ‘N’ Roll Magazine” — as it so modestly termed itself almost from the beginning — was “legendary” because the first time you picked it up, it was like absolutely nothing you’d ever experienced before. What you found in its pages was you … if you were at all interested in what was becoming known as “rock culture.” Rolling Stone, which began in San Francisco two years before CREEM, latched onto the hippie counterculture that was taking shape in its own back yard. The culture that CREEM celebrated, however, was a totally different one — it was loud, crude and obnoxious, championing the music and the sex, drugs and rock ‘n’ roll lifestyle that fit those criteria. James Taylor or Crosby, Stills & Nash would’ve never made it onto a cover of CREEM, just as the Stooges or Lou Reed — some of CREEM’s earliest cover subjects — never made the cover of Rolling Stone back then. As Bangs himself once described the aesthetic: “Grossness is the true criterion for rock ‘n’ roll. The cruder the clang and grind, the more fun.”

Maybe you’d sensed a similar sense of community in rock ‘n’ roll music itself and the communal spirit that seemed to be part of pre-corporate rock radio. Even Gloria Stavers’ 16 magazine offered an early glimpse in the mid-’60s, despite its teenybop orientation. But in CREEM, one could find actual words and photos that alerted you to the fact others shared the same unique rock ‘n’ roll universe (which included much more than just music) that you previously thought was exclusively your own.

“Don’t ask me why I obsessively look to rock ‘n’ roll bands for some kind of model for a better society,” Bangs wrote. “I guess it’s just that I glimpsed something beautiful in a flashbulb moment once, and perhaps mistaking it for prophecy, have been seeking its fulfillment ever since.”

Some have claimed that Bangs’ best writing reads and feels like great rock ‘n’ roll music, and that was frequently true of the entire magazine as well. CREEM set the ball in motion for the truism that junk culture and the trash aesthetic can also be brilliant art. As he often argued: “The first mistake of art is to assume that it’s serious.”

Many believe to this day that Bangs and CREEM conceptualized, if not invented, what would eventually become the punk rock explosion, celebrating Detroit revolutionary John Sinclair’s concept of a “Guitar Army” and offering a window into the future. “Every great work of art has two faces,” Bangs once suggested, “one toward its own time and one toward the future, toward eternity.”

CREEM, of course, was a uniquely Detroit institution, as important to the city’s musical legacy as the MC5, the Stooges, the White Stripes or any other rock ‘n’ roll institution you care to name.

The magazine has recently resurfaced in the media limelight due to the publication of a new, extremely controversial anthology book, compiled by former Detroiter Robert Matheu (who first licensed and then bought the rights to the magazine last year) and Brian J. Bowe (a Michigan-based writer and journalism instructor who served as editor of Matheu’s CREEM Web site for several years). A few old staffers, including Dave Marsh, are extremely upset about the book, while the ownership of the brand name is currently a matter of litigation and bad feelings. However, in the middle of all the squabbling, writer Scott Woods astutely observed on his popular rockcritics.com Web site that there appeared to be an “underlying, more interesting battle going on here, a sideshow to [the book] vs. the CREEM critics — that being ’70s CREEMsters vs. ’80s CREEMsters.”

And, indeed, a large community of rock aficionados — some of them not even born when CREEM was in its initial early ’70s heyday — have been all over various Web sites, taking opposing sides and arguing among themselves over the life, death and strange resurrection of a rock ‘n’ roll landmark.

by Barry Kramer, a Wayne State University student and entrepreneur who ran a hip Detroit record store called Full Circle, as well as Mixed Media, the city’s first head shop and alternative book store (which reportedly employed a young Gilda Radner, among others). Kramer — who briefly hosted a WABX radio show — was also trying his hand at concert promotion and later managed Mitch Ryder’s post-Detroit Wheels band, Detroit, among several other groups. Legend has it that when a local radical “underground” newspaper rejected a review Kramer had written of the Incredible String Band (the same group he’d disastrously booked into Ford Auditorium), he decided to start his own publication.

Tony Reay, a British expatriate who worked as a clerk in Kramer’s record store, became the first editor, naming the magazine — which was originally his idea — after his favorite band. Charlie Auringer, later a Metro Times art director, signed on as the new publication’s photo editor and designer (following a brief stint by Robin Sommers). Dave Marsh, who once described himself as “a skinny 19-year-old suffering from overexposure to LSD and the MC5, with absolutely no prospects,” joined the staff in the summer of that same year. The first issue of the magazine was only distributed in Detroit and nearby communities, originally taking the form of what are considered “zines” today. Kramer soon made a deal with a New York-based distributor, which sent the magazine direct to retailers (although a majority of those retailers turned out to be porn shops, which picked up the magazine due to its strange name; it frequently sat beside Al Goldstein’s Screw on many newsstands).

It would eventually evolve, within a relatively short two years, from something that resembled a newspaper into a glossy, color-filled magazine; it was a rapid evolution after newsstands alerted Kramer that the newspaper format — even quarter-folded as it now was — wouldn’t fit on newsstands. After Kramer signed a deal with the national magazine distributor Curtis Circulation, with Richard Siegel, one of his hippie buddies (who also wrote and shot photos for CREEM) in place as circulation director, the magazine would explode on the national scene.

The first office was in the Cass Corridor, specifically 3729 Cass Ave. It remained on Cass for the next two years, before moving to a 120-acre farm that Kramer purchased in Walled Lake at 13 Mile and Haggerty roads. The move came after a group of gangsters, brandishing automatic weapons, had stormed and robbed the Cass offices, and Kramer determined that the area was no longer safe for his staff. The move also came shortly after 23-year-old Bangs — who’d recently been fired from Rolling Stone’s record reviews department by publisher Jann Wenner for “disrespecting musicians” after a hatchet job on Canned Heat — arrived in Detroit from his native California in late 1971. The writer originally came to town to do an Alice Cooper story, ended up loving the city (once calling it “rock’s only hope”) and stayed five years.

The magazine thrived during those Walled Lake years, where all the staff lived communally on the farm in one big house. That isn’t to say there weren’t major volatile blowups in those early days. In fact, some of the legendary stories make the squabbling going on between former staffers today seem tame by comparison. Bangs and Marsh got into a fistfight so bad one day that Marsh ended up with a gash in his head. Seems the tidier Marsh, tired of Lester’s dog pooping everywhere, placed the dung on Bangs’ typewriter. Strangely, their relationship was much better from that day forward. There are also stories of physical spats between Bangs and Kramer.

CREEM would eventually settle into swank editorial offices in downtown Birmingham, which certainly spelled success in those years (which included several different editorial lineups) before its 1987 move to Los Angeles — six years after Kramer’s death from a nitrous oxide overdose on Jan. 29, 1981. Bangs, who left the magazine in 1976 and never wrote for it again, died in near poverty at age 33 about a year later from an accidental Darvon overdose in New York City on April 30, 1982. The move to California, following the sale of CREEM to Los Angeles businessman Arnold Levitt (who kept the publication in Detroit for 18 months after purchasing it) would result in the magazine’s demise following years of bleeding money, bad drugs, mismanagement and, ultimately, dwindling readership in changing economic and cultural times.

there’s an ancient photo of the long-gone Higby’s Drugstore in downtown Bad Axe, which was where, on its relatively small newsstand, I first discovered CREEM in the early ’70s. I vividly remember leafing through its pages one afternoon after school, especially enthralled by a feature article on Alice Cooper, who’d only just recently released Love It to Death. I bought it, rode my bike home as fast as I could, and devoured every single word inside as though they were revelations from on high. From then on, I waited for CREEM every month the way one awaits a trusted friend. And it would remain a trusted “friend” throughout my high school and college days.

You see, the world was a much smaller (or larger, depending on how you view it) place then. You could spend years looking for a specific record in those pre-Internet days … and I often did. But I was able to read about the New York Dolls, Roxy Music, Television, the Ramones and, hell, even the Velvet Underground in CREEM before I ever heard a note of music by any of them, before many of them had even released a note of music. One could read the work of a brilliant New Jersey-based writer-poet named Patti Smith in the pages of CREEM years before she released a life-changing album called Horses. This was an era before every daily newspaper had a pop music critic. There was no such thing as Entertainment Tonight, and even if there had been, it certainly wouldn’t have been covering badass proto-punk rock bands.

No, the only way a fan could know what, say, David Bowie or Lou Reed were doing at any particular time in those days was by buying the records, going to the concerts, or reading CREEM (or, somewhat later, looking at the photos in the NYC-based Rock Scene magazine). In fact, the magazine became so pertinent to some of those artists’ careers that when I saw Reed at Detroit’s Masonic Auditorium on his peroxided-hair, painted-black-fingernails Sally Can’t Dance tour in 1975, I recall him saying only two things from the stage the entire night: “Shut the fuck up and let me dance!” and “Take a walk on the wild side, Lester Bangs!” Without Bangs, Reed (and many of the aforementioned artists) would’ve never have had a career … or, at least, certainly not the same career.

When Bangs was at his peak, CREEM was one of the funniest publications ever, as hilarious as anything that ever appeared in National Lampoon. Irreverent? Oh, yes. And then some. But while it skewered and made fun of everyone and everything, it also consistently ridiculed itself (an element seemingly lost on so many “irreverent” and “humorous” hipper-than-thou publications and Web sites of recent times). High-energy, sometimes crude, and often in your face? Oh, yes. But with a heart. Always with an extremely huge heart.

Bangs’ style has often been compared to the Beat writers (if the Beats were moralists with even greater senses of idealism) and described as gonzo journalism; imagine an even funnier Hunter S. Thompson with a sweet side and obsessed with music. But what he came up with was all his own, not to mention a major influence on hundreds, if not thousands, of often lame imitators over the past four decades. “If you give people the license to be as outrageous as they want in absolutely any fashion they can dream up,” he’d later write, “they’ll be creative about it and do something good besides.” He was describing the then-blossoming punk rock scene, but he could have just as easily been describing his career at CREEM.

If you do a Google search on Bangs’ name, you’ll find numerous quotes and morsels of wisdom and outrage. For instance, this lead to a Helen Reddy review (an album he reviewed positively): “All men are weasels. The only use they have for women is to get their rocks off, and half the time the only reason they want to do that is to prove something. Which is why all women hold them in such utter contempt.” You might get some sense of his extreme honesty and sensitivity in such statements as “Lou Reed is my hero principally because he stands for all the most fucked-up things I could ever possibly conceive of. Which probably only shows the limits of my imagination.”

But reading Lester and experiencing his magic is a cumulative effect. It can’t — and shouldn’t — be taken out of context. Perhaps writer Andrew Leonard said it best when writing about Bangs for Salon.com: “To pull out a sentence or a phrase here and there … is to do an injustice to the whole. [Lester’s] sentences pile on top of each other, the attention wanders frenetically … To read his essays is to lose your breath; it’s like hanging on for dear life as the toboggan hurtles downhill — you don’t really know where it’s headed and you’ve lost all ability to steer, but the adrenaline rush from the experience is enough, the racing heart is its own reward.” Leonard ultimately concludes that if he was still alive today, “Lester would have the best blog of all time … because Lester’s blog would be essential to our cultural sanity.”

No faint praise, but Bangs would probably be quite amused by some of the loftier intellectual claims made for the magazine and his writing in recent times. An article in the Toronto Globe & Mail several years ago compared the ideas floating around the early CREEM to Dorothy Parker and the other writers who frequented the famed Algonquin Roundtable in the ’20s and ’30s. Billy Altman — who served as CREEM’s New York (and records review) editor for a little more than a decade, beginning after Bangs’ 1976 departure — has heard people compare CREEM to the New Yorker magazine, although the only real similarity was that both publications gave writers the freedom to write about whatever they wanted, in the way they wanted. Interestingly, it was in the pages of the New Yorker that late, great music writer Ellen Willis came up with one of the most apt descriptions of the CREEM I read as a kid when she wrote: “Unlike Rolling Stone, which is a bastion of San Francisco counter-culture rock-as-art orthodoxy, CREEM is committed to a pop aesthetic. It speaks to fans who consciously value rock as an expression of urban teenage culture.” In that sense, then, New Yorker founder Harold Ross and Barry Kramer were kindred spirits. And if any real genius, beyond marketing, can be ascribed to the latter, it would be his knack for discovering young creative talent and allowing it to flourish.

Despite all that young talent, however, Lester Bangs was the first name I memorized when I started reading CREEM. His writing voice spoke to me directly, immediately, often almost touching something in my soul. It would be years before I realized that the voice was doing the same thing to thousands of others — and those sparks helped kick off a revolution in popular culture that would eventually come to captivate millions (many of whom had never even heard the name “Lester Bangs” when they were drawn into the culture that he’d helped to create).

He turned me and so many others on to tons of music that we may not have experienced otherwise. And his touch eventually ended up all over the magazine, from the response to readers in the letters section to those famously hilarious photo captions, which first took root during Lester’s brilliant reign.

of an early life’s ambition to become part of CREEM’s history when I joined the magazine’s editorial department in 1981. I was equally thrilled when I got to be the youngest (for a change) former CREEM editor to appear on DeRogatis’s aforementioned 2000 CREEM panel. It struck me as a bit sad, however, that I appeared to be the only one on the panel still talking to every other member of the panel at the time … or at least the only one who wasn’t still mad at another panelist about something that had happened in the past. Well, maybe John Morthland — the esteemed music journalist who jumped from Rolling Stone to CREEM in the early ’70s — wasn’t carrying any personal grudges either. Morthland, who’s frequently credited with bringing some editorial professionalism and structure to the magazine upon his arrival, was honest enough to admit during the panel that “some of my very worst writing was in CREEM as well as some of my very best” — something I believe is true about the writing in general in CREEM during every era of the magazine. Perhaps the continued respect former staffers have for him, not to mention his abject honesty, guaranteed he was still getting along with everyone.

But aside from that, current Detroit News scribe Susan Whitall — who essentially hired me as an editor at CREEM and who, despite several major disagreements over the years, I still considered a friend — wasn’t on good terms with Ed Ward, who I’d first met, along with Marsh and renowned critic Greil Marcus, at the University of Memphis’ first academic Elvis conference and symposium in 1982. (I later visited Ward for a week’s vacation in Austin, Texas, after which he tried to get me to take his rock critic job at the Austin American-Statesman newspaper, unfortunately only weeks after I’d moved to L.A. with CREEM.) For as long as I’ve known both of them, Dave Marsh — who befriended me via mail after seeing a college paper review I’d written of his first book, and continued to encourage me by mail long before I met him in Memphis — hasn’t gotten along with the aforementioned Altman, another longtime friend (who I agreed to share my microphone with on the panel when he asked to join at the last minute). And so it went.

I’ve always liked and respected fellow panelist Ben Edmonds, an early ’70s CREEM editor whom I’d first met when Kramer’s ex-wife Connie (who ran the magazine for four years after his death) briefly brought him to Birmingham from L.A. to serve as an editorial “consultant” right before the magazine folded for the first time in 1985. Not long after his arrival, however, CREEM filed for bankruptcy and was sold to Levitt, a New Jersey-born, L.A.-based publishing businessman (and reportedly a friend of Connie’s family) who was formerly the business manager of Larry Flynt Publications. And I’ve always had “tons of love” (to use her parlance) for Jaan Uhelszki, another early CREEM editor, who’s had an almost maternal relationship with me over the years to the point that she’d joke “This is your mother talking” when we’d talk on the phone in the ’90s.

So, I was obviously thrilled to be in the presence of all these folks, together for the first time in many years as a group. After all, a few of those names had once come close to replacing the superheroes and cartoon characters whose comic books I’d been buying at Higby’s in those grade school years before discovering CREEM. I’d certainly considered all of them spiritual friends even before I’d actually met any of them in person. On the panel, I was basically saying the same things about what the magazine meant to me as a kid as I’ve written here, and had just gotten to the part about how funny the magazine was … when Marsh, who’d already had his say as the first panelist to speak that afternoon (and spoke long enough, albeit with always interesting info, that Altman was mumbling something to the effect of “Is he going to let anybody else speak?” under his breath) interrupted me by stating: “With all due respect, by the time Bill got there, the magazine had become just a comic book.”

Whether exposing the community to international music or the sounds of the 1950s, WUOG 90.5 FM, has new programs offering a diverse selection.The student-volunteer station has 31 specialty programs, with four new shows this semester: “Odd Man Out,” “Breaking the Ice,” Japan Pops” and “Jitters and Rags.”"There were (disc jockeys) interested and they proposed the shows, and we thought they knew enough about the genres to host the show,” said Amanda Perofsky, a junior from Macon and programming director.”Japan Pops” showcases Japanese music from 8-9 p.m. on Mondays, followed by “Breaking the Ice,” playing Icelandic music from 9-10 p.m.For Jennifer Cole, “Breaking the Ice” DJ and sophomore from Suwanee, the idea for the program came after a call from an excited listener, who heard her playing Icelandic bands, she said.”I realized that Icelandic is kind of its own genre,” said Cole. “The more I researched it, I realized that there are a lot of cool bands out there.”Cole’s program is driven by listeners voting on what genre of Icelandic music to play the next week.Voters chose Icelandic hip-hop for next week’s show, Cole said.”They are really big on indie rock and metal, but have all the same genres as American music.”"Jitters and Rags” features pre-1950s pop music, while “Sundialing” offers “psych-pop garage rock,” Perofsky said.”We thought (”Jitters and Rags”) would be great because not a lot of other stations have it,” said Perofsky. “It’s an interesting concept.”In addition to premiering new shows, “Odd Man Out,” returns from a semester-long hiatus. It highlights the music of all-female bands.Still, pre-existing shows such as “A Matter of Jazz” remain popular with listeners, Perofsky said.”‘A Matter of Jazz’ airs on Sundays for three hours and is a staple of WUOG.”Students interested in DJing for the station can e-mail training@wuog.org, or visit wuog.org.

TORONTO — When the late Oscar Peterson was a piano-crazed youth in the 1930s, learning to play jazz was pretty much a do-it-yourself job. It wasn’t as if he could sign up for a course in improvisation or jazz harmony at Montreal High School; he had to find teachers on his own and hope that what they taught would provide the tools he needed.

Peterson was lucky enough to have found an ideal instructor in Paul de Marky, a Hungarian who taught at Montreal’s McGill Conservatory. On a pianistic level, the aspiring jazz musician was in awe of de Marky’s playing. "He’d be sitting there playing and playing, with this beautiful sound that he’d get out of the instrument," Peterson says in Gene Lees’s biography, Oscar Peterson: The Will to Swing.

But he was also lucky, because de Marky was also sympathetic to Peterson’s desire to play jazz. "After the lesson, he’d say, 'What are you doing now, in your field, in the jazz field … ‘ " Peterson says in the book. "I remember playing The Man I Love for him. He’d say, 'I don’t hear the melody singing. … Make it sing.’ "

Aspiring jazz pianists these days don’t need quite so much luck to master both their instrument and their field.

Thanks in large part to the efforts of the International Association for Jazz Education (IAJE), a coalition of musician-educators who will be holding their annual convention in Toronto this week, jazz education has become a standard part of the music curriculum in high schools and universities around the world.

It has been a revolution in music education, and a fairly recent one at that. "The number of schools that offer degrees - not just undergraduate, but graduate degrees and doctoral degrees - has increased enormously," says Paul Read, director of graduate jazz studies at the University of Toronto and the Canada representative on the IAJE executive board.

"We’re offering a doctoral degree in jazz performance at the University of Toronto now," he adds. "In 1991, when I first was hired, I don’t know if there was a doctoral degree in jazz performance in North America, period."

Obviously, mastering the art of improvisation is a part of such an education, but it’s not as if jazz studies consist entirely of Jamming 101. At the university level, it’s not unusual for an aspiring jazz musician to put in as much time studying Bach as bebop, along with intensive classes in harmony, theory and composition.

Jazz is incredibly demanding music, points out Bill McFarlin, IAJE executive director. "It requires very strong musicianship," he says.

"You have to have a command of the mechanics, but you also have to have a command of being a whole musician. You have to be able to cover the whole portfolio if you’re going to be a performer.

"That’s one of the reasons that most jazz musicians who are professionals in today’s world are equally comfortable in a Broadway setting, in a classical setting, in a jazz setting. And being a comprehensive musician only strengthens their jazz playing."

Not that everyone in a jazz studies program ends up playing jazz. A lot of pop musicians, from guitarist Bruce Cockburn to singer Tracy Bonham to members of the progressive metal band Dream Theatre, are products of jazz programs, as are a huge number of studio musicians. In a sense, jazz programs have become, for popular music, what the conservatory system has been for classical.

"There has been a bit of a revolution, but I think of it more as an expansion," Read says. "Occasionally, you still hear the argument that you must play classical before you play jazz, but that notion is really an anachronism. You do have to learn the discipline of playing an instrument and often classical music offers that to a student."

Jazz also draws on many of the creative devices and analytical tools used by classical composers. "I remember when I was in school, we analyzed a Charlie Parker solo for species counterpoint," McFarlin says. (Parker’s counterpoint, he adds, "was perfect.")

Knowing how to create music as well as play it is, perhaps, the greatest difference between the jazz curriculum and its classical counterpart. After all, in order to get a job with a symphony orchestra, a violinist need only play - albeit incredibly well. But, as McFarlin points out, "jazz musicians have to be spontaneous composers, and it’s that spontaneous composition - a.k.a. improvisation - that certainly strengthens our musicianship as players."

Thanks to the phenomenal growth of jazz programs since the IAJE began its advocacy for jazz education in 1968, some have joked that jazz education has become more popular than jazz itself - a notion that took on the weight of actual news after a New York Times article last year suggested that jazz education was growing even as the music itself was dying.

Although flattered by the argument, neither Read nor McFarlin believes that jazz is anywhere near death’s door. "The music has never been a pop music, except maybe in the thirties, when it found its way into the dance halls," Read says. "So I would say that it’s not as popular as it once was, but it’s as strong as it’s ever been.

"The reason I say that is that recording the music has just exploded. There are so many people who are putting recordings out and just distributing them worldwide - that just never would have been imagined in the days of Charlie Parker."

True, that hasn’t translated into the sort of sales figures that would make a record executive drool, but that doesn’t mean the audience isn’t there. "I truly believe more people are listening to jazz today than 10 years ago, because of satellite radio and iPods and these other things," McFarlin says. "I just don’t think it’s being properly measured."

*****

The IAJE will bring thousands of jazz musicians and educators to Toronto for its annual convention, which runs from tomorrow through Saturday. Naturally, there will be panel discussions and workshops, on topics ranging from The Jazz Trio to Reducing Unnecessary Tension in Performance. But there will also be performances. Some highlights open to the public:

Jazz Masters Gala

Originally, the biggest and most prestigious event - Friday’s concert and awards ceremony that will honour the late Oscar Peterson - was to be open to the public. But the IAJE decided late last week that the event will be open to conference attendees only. Still, those who will attend will see pianist Oliver Jones paying tribute to Peterson as a soloist with the Smithsonian Jazz Masterworks Orchestra. Weekday highlights

Things start tomorrow with an 8 p.m. performance at the Metro Toronto Convention Centre’s Constitution Hall featuring New York Voices with saxophonist Paquito D’Rivera, as well as guitarist (and Herbie Hancock sideman) Lionel Loueke. At 11 p.m., the Scandinavian-inspired combo Nordic Connect plays the Convention Centre’s John Bassett Theatre.

On Thursday, saxophonist Courtney Pine hosts an evening of English jazz, with Martin Taylor, Dennis Rollins and others, starting at 8 p.m. in Constitution Hall.

At 11, pianist Kenny Werner will lead the Delirium Blues Project at John Bassett Theatre.

Weekend highlights

Saturday sees Constitution Hall filling with the sound of Canadian jazz, thanks to a showcase featuring clarinetist François Houle, Barry Romberg’s Random Access Large Ensemble, plus an all-star quintet with saxophonist Rich Wilkins, trumpeter Guido Basso, pianist Don Thompson, bassist Dave Young and drummer Terry Clarke. It starts at 8 p.m.; tickets are available through Ticketmaster, 416-870-8000 or http://www.ticketmaster.ca.

Finally, although Darcy James Argue’s experimental big band Secret Society North, featuring such stalwarts as Christine Jensen, Kevin Turcotte, Tim Hagans and Linda Allemano, is playing at IAJE, the public won’t have access to the show. Fortunately, the group is also playing at the Tranzac (292 Brunswick, Ave.) at 8 p.m. Sunday. Tickets are $15, and available at the door.

J.D.C.

Whether it’s Toby Keith claiming he’ll “never smoke weed with Willie again,” or Snoop Dogg waxing poetic about sipping on “Gin and Juice,” popular music and its association with certain indulgences has been a parental point of concern for many years.

But can popular music really lead kids to drug and alcohol use?

According to a recent national study, out of the 279 most popular songs of 2005, one in three songs contained one or more references to substance abuse.

While rock ‘n’ roll has long been a target of contention, according to the study only 14 percent of rock songs contained any reference to drinking or drug use. Rap music, researchers said, is by far the biggest offender - with 86 percent of the songs containing some reference to drugs or alcohol.

Country music comes in second in the survey, with 37 percent of songs referencing drinking or drugs. Pop music came in last, with only eight percent of songs containing such references.

But do these lyrics actually have an effect on human behavior - more specifically, the young people who are doing most of the listening?

“We don’t know if it really makes a difference,” said study author and University of Pittsburgh Assistant Professor of Medicine Dr. Brian Primack. “Maybe kids listen to songs with alcohol, and it doesn’t affect them one way or another. Maybe it affects them a great deal. It’s good for us to know that this exposure is there so that we can go the next step. We can talk to kids about it and say what we think is correct, and what is not.”

For Tahlequah musician Matt Gurley, the problem isn’t the music. It’s something much larger.

“I don’t think music is the cause. I think it’s alienation, loneliness, boredom, and the shock of societal indoctrination,” Gurley said. “People want to take risks, harbor secrets, and most of all, escape the drudgery of everyday life, so they develop addictions, whether they resort to bingo, infomercials, religion, marijuana, shopping, sports, or music - which is very much an addiction all its own.”

Human nature, said Gurley, will lead people to drugs or alcohol much faster than any lyric.

“People also get into drugs and alcohol because of repression - tell them not to do it, and they think, ‘Man, this must really be fun if all of these uptight conservatives want so badly to keep me away from it!”’ Gurley said. “It’s human nature. Put a sign on a wall that says, ‘Do not look over this wall,’ and everyone will scramble to get a good view.

“If the people in control really wanted to quell drug popularity, they would start a big ‘Drugs are Cool’ campaign. When will they learn?”

Garron Marsh writes for Tahlequah (Okla.) Daily Press.

Kate Nash: Meet the new queen of effortless, effervescent British pop. With Amy Winehouse and Lily Allen out of the way, America is hers for the taking. Jan. 12 at Popscene, 330 Ritch St., San Francisco. For a preview, go to www.myspace.com/katenashmusic.

Cat Power: “Jukebox” is another collection of lazy, calm covers of classics from Chan Marshall. This time she lends her starry-eyed magic to songs made famous by James Brown, Frank Sinatra and, in at least one instance, herself. Jan. 22. For a preview, go to www.myspace.com/catpower.

Shelby Lynne: On her latest album, “Just a Little Lovin’,” the insolent country singer takes on nine choice tunes from the Dusty Springfield catalog, including “The Look of Love” and “I Only Want to Be With You.” That loud bang? Heaven just inched a little closer to Earth. Jan. 29. For a preview, go to www.myspace.com/shelbylynne.

Natasha Bedingfield: Known best as the girl who sings the “Hills” theme song, this British Top 10 mainstay returns with “Pocket Full of Sunshine,” a second album of crispy, clear vocals, billion-dollar beats and, on the single “Love Like This,” a duet with Sean Kingston. Jan. 22. For a preview, go to www.myspace.com/natashabedingfield.

Kylie Minogue: She walloped breast cancer. Now the petite Australian sensation gets back to business with “X,” an album of unapologetically frothy disco music from the future, as envisaged by Daft Punk and mad Sony engineers. Collaborators include Groove Armada, Scissor Sisters and Boy George. Feb 12. For a preview, go to www.myspace.com/kylieminogue.

Siouxsie: Having disposed of her husband, band and redundant last name, the former leader of the Banshees returns to malevolent form on her solo debut, “Mantaray.” The single “Into a Swan” is not just an amazing tune but also a statement of intent: “I’m on the verge of an awakening.” Feb. 13 at the Fillmore, 1805 Geary Blvd., San Francisco. For a preview, go to www.myspace.com/sioux siemantaray.

k.d. lang: Touring behind her first album of original material in eight years, “Watershed,” the Canadian singer is set to confirm she’s in possession of the most sweeping, romantic, lovely voice in all of pop. March 25-26 at the Palace of Fine Arts Theatre, 3301 Lyon St., San Francisco. For a preview, go to www.myspace.com/kdlangmusic.

The Breeders: With the Pixies reunion having run so far it ultimately ran into the ground, Kim Deal returns to doing what she does best: making offbeat, quietly intense music with her greasy-haired twin sister, Kelley. Our goose bumps are trembling in anticipation of the Steve Albini-produced “Mountain Battles.” April 8. For a preview, go to www.myspace.com/thebreeders.

E-mail Aidin Vaziri at avaziri@sfchronicle.com.

January 13th, 2008What's hot in pop for 2008

While the irony of the statement was probably lost on the former football star, we could probably all learn a thing or two from it - predictions are notoriously tricky.Last year, for example, while most critics rightly agreed Mika was going to be a big star, few saw Leona Lewis returning from her American break to become the year’s real success story.But difficult or not, it’s not going to stop us having a crack at this forecasting lark ourselves.Over the next 12 months, some of the biggest artists in the world are going to be releasing albums. If 2007 was the year of new acts - Klaxons, The View, Jamie T, The Enemy, Kate Nash - 2008 will be the year the likes of Madonna, REM, Coldplay and Oasis remind us all why they’re so well known.Perhaps the biggest band of them all, U2, will be giving us their 12th album. Little is known about the as-yet-untitled record, but as the band have recalled producers Brian Eno and Daniel Lanois, the men who helped craft The Joshua Tree, we should expect something very special indeed.We can also expect albums from Portishead, who haven’t released anything since their self-titled second album in 1997, The Kooks, who have now sold around two millions copies of their 2006 debut Inside In/Inside Out, and Eminem - who should have collected plenty of material to rap about in the four years since his last record.Late last year, Radiohead shocked the music industry by releasing album In Rainbows on their own website, allowing fans to pay what they wanted for the download. The move from the Oxford quartet came after Prince gave his last album away with the Mail On Sunday and since then the likes of The Charlatans and Ray Davies have also joined in, giving their music away with newspapers. So is this the way the industry is going? Up until a few years ago, artists would tour to promote sales of their records, but there’s been a reversal of that tradition - now albums are released to promote live shows. For example, The Police, who reformed last year, grossed almost £70m from the US leg of their tour alone. Record labels are getting fed up with this situation, however, as they get no revenue from gigs. Over the next year or so, expect to see labels getting into concert booking and promoting, and artists signing new types of contracts with their employers.Typically one step ahead of the competition, Madonna has already made her move and lined up alongside Live Nation. Traditionally a tour company, it’s now venturing into the record industry. The deal Live Nation has with ‘Madge’ is worth an estimated £120m and entitles it to a slice of all the superstar’s forthcoming earnings from albums, tours and merchandising. It was an unprecedented move at the time, but rest assured this time next year Madonna won’t be the only artist involved in such a deal.Downloads can only increase in popularity too. Around 95% of all singles in the charts are now bought online, and it won’t be long until the figure for album sales catches up, although it’s highly unlikely the CD will die out this year, or even by the end of the decade. The death knell was sounded for vinyl years ago, yet it’s still a popular format for music lovers.So which new artists should we be looking out for?As previously mentioned, Leona Lewis was 2007’s runaway success. She released both the biggest selling single of the year in Bleeding Love, and the fastest-selling debut album in UK history, but don’t expect the most recent X Factor winner Leon Jackson to have similar success. It’s a safe bet the young Scot’s fame will vanish almost as quickly as it arrived.Duffy, however, is a different story. The beautiful North Walian is being touted as ‘the next Amy Winehouse’, although we should point out that’s merely a reference to her classic-sounding voice and epic songs, not her lifestyle. Two performances on Later… With Jools Holland have exposed her to a wide audience, and with songs that can appeal to both Radio 1 and Radio 2 listeners, she’ll have no trouble finding fans of all ages.The same can also be said of Adele and the more folk-based Laura Marling, who have fast become the names to drop of late. They’ll both release debut albums soon.Hailing from Manchester and with an outspoken singer called Liam, there’s something very familiar about The Courteeners. Thankfully, they are distinctive, and have the songs - namely What Took You So Long? and Acrylic - to make them a massive success in 2008. Also set for big things are Joe Lean And The Jing Jang Jong, The Troubadours, These New Puritans, Cajun Dance Party and Glasvegas.Ploughing a different furrow, Royworld are also worth your attention. Recalling the likes of Keane and The Feeling, their lush pop will be all over the radio later on in the year. Check out Elasticity on their MySpace page if you need proof.So there you have our predictions for 2008. Listen up, it’s going to be an amazing 12 months.

January 13th, 2008Match made in NZ music

Celine and Rene, Paul and Heather, John and Yoko - Yulia and Glyn?

Popular Christchurch classical and pop singer Yulia Townsend has announced her engagement to Glyn MacLean, her manager and pianist.

In a press statement charged with all the ardour of new love, Mr MacLean drew attention to the celebrity engagement.

"Isn't it funny that you can think: 'I'm her manager, I must be professional … only to find that the real integrity lies in finding your true feelings and testing them?" he wrote.

In the end, "to not love Yulia would be the greater crime", he wrote.

Meeting in person yesterday, he was equally passionate.

"I shoot from the hip as a writer. It's how I feel."

The pair met in the middle of last year before moving to Wellington and declaring their love in an internet conversation at Christmas.

"That's when we first confessed our love to each other," Yulia said.

Age is one issue the couple have overcome - Mr MacLean is 39, and Yulia is 22.

"I guess you could draw parallels to Celine Dion and her husband Rene, in that there is an age difference," he wrote.

The age gap between the Canadians is 26 years.

"Wisdom knows no such boundaries, and Yulia's own life path has been remarkably similar to mine."

The wedding was likely to be in next month, though they would just as happily get married next week, Mr MacLean said.

Yulia moved from Russia to New Zealand in 2002 after Kiwi Bill Townsend and her mother wed.

Britney Spears got all the headlines. Miley Cyrus got all the complaints. And Radiohead got all the praise.

It was an eventful and pivotal year in popular music.

While CD sales declined big time (to no one’s surprise), the rules of the game began to change significantly. Radiohead became the most prominent act to let fans decide how much to pay to download an album (and a very good one, at that). MySpace.com launched hit singles by complete unknowns, including Colbie Caillat and Ingrid Michaelson. The Eagles gave Wal-Mart the exclusive rights to their first studio album in nearly 30 years. Prince distributed 2.8 million copies of his new CD free in a London newspaper. And Madonna signed a revolutionary new multi-purpose deal with concert promoter Live Nation to encompass recording, management and concerts.

The music-industry machine is broken. The visionary artists aren’t trying to fix it; they are merely trying to invent their own maverick models, which may not work for other artists.

Miley Cyrus, 15, who plays the uber-popular tween queen Hannah Montana on TV’s Disney Channel, proved that the current concert-ticketing system doesn’t work. The most in-demand tour ticket in history, Miley caused a massive controversy among moms this fall. It was a volatile combination of newbie concert-ticket buyers - who don’t hesitate to spoil their little Madelines - battling resourceful scalpers equipped with high-tech software. In the end, the Moms blamed Miley and her poorly run fan club and touring operation.

The only hotter ticket was Led Zeppelin’s one-day blockbuster reunion this month in London, which elicited a staggering 1 million requests for the 20,000 tickets.

Reunions ruled all year, with the Police, Van Halen, Genesis, Smashing Pumpkins and the Spice Girls (?) all hitting the road.

The decade’s biggest pop juggernaut, “American Idol” lost its Midas touch this year - thankfully - but former “Idol” finalist Chris Daughtry managed to score 2007’s best-selling disc (”Daughtry,” released in 2006). To show you how dreadful CD sales have been in 2007, the best-selling new title of the year, at 2.77 million, is a Christmas album, “Noel,” by Josh (Oprah Loves Me) Groban.

No pop figure garnered more attention in 2007 than Britney Spears - for all the wrong reasons. Bad parenting, bad hair, bad performance on the MTV Video Music Awards. Actually, her CD - remember she released “Blackout”? - wasn’t half-bad. But no one really cared.

Speaking of train wrecks, by year’s end Amy Winehouse was garnering more attention for bad behavior than for her music. That’s too bad, because she is my artist of the year. Her “Back to Black,” a forward-looking retro R&B collection with modern lyrics and seductive vocals by the unforgettable young woman with beehive hair, Cleopatra eyeliner and sailor tattoos, was my favorite album of 2007. Throw in the U.S. release of Winehouse’s 2003 U.K. debut, “Frank,” a jazzier but equally sharp-tongued effort, and she had a one-two knockout punch.

Runners-up for artist of the year are Arcade Fire, an original, visionary band that made a superb album and presented an even better concert, and Robert Plant, whose left-field collaboration with Alison Krauss proved to be as inspiringly understated and organic as his reuniting with Jimmy Page, John Paul Jones and Jason Bonham was inspiringly obvious and thrilling.

What do we have to look forward to in 2008? A Led Zeppelin reunion tour; trials for R. Kelly (for child porn) and Phil Spector (for murder, once again); Jersey Week in the Twin Cities (Bruce Springsteen, Bon Jovi and the Frankie Valli-inspired musical “Jersey Boys” will all be here in mid-March), and Britney’s 16-year-old baby sister, actress Jamie Lynn Spears, showing off her parenting skills.


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