Tag Archives: foursome

Black Eyed Peas Plan Stadium-Heavy 2011 Tour

Group may hit the road ‘after February,’ will.i.am tells Billboard. By Mawuse Ziegbe Black Eyed Peas’ will.i.am Photo: David Livingston/Getty Images The Black Eyed Peas are planning to rock as many bodies as possible when they hit the road next year, so they’re hoping to pack their trek into massive venues around the world. Peas frontman will.i.am told Billboard that the foursome’s recent South American gigs will be the blueprint for filling the seats in stadiums across the globe. “South America was a test,” he said. “We did all our homework … to try to figure out how we can do stadiums in other countries, in America, in Europe. If Black Eyed Peas can do five O2 arenas, why don’t we just do it in one shot? If we can do three Staples Centers, we should do one Dodgers Stadium. So that’s how we’ll probably tour this time around.” “The Time (Dirty Bit)” MC said rocking to the collective’s pop smashes with thousands of other revelers is the best way to experience the Peas live. “It’s like you’re there with all your friends. You’re there in front of 50,000 people and they’re there to watch you and your friends,” he said. “Nothing gets any better than that. It’s the best feeling, the best one yet.” The band is expected to get in some practice hitting the stage for a major crowd at the top of next year. Sources have revealed that the Peas will helm halftime-show festivities at the Super Bowl , which often draws over 100 million viewers. Will’s comment that the hitmaking quartet won’t launch their global stadium takeover until “after February,” the same month the Super Bowl airs, is perhaps a hint that the Peas will be throwing down at the football-fest. The Peas’ sixth record, The Beginning, is slated to be released November 30. Are you looking forward to checking out the Black Eyes Peas on tour? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Black Eyed Peas

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Black Eyed Peas Plan Stadium-Heavy 2011 Tour

Joe Budden Credits Eminem With Slaughterhouse’s Detroit Love

New Jersey MC says Em’ is just one of the most supportive hip-hop people that I’ve met.’ By Mawuse Ziegbe, with reporting by Rahman Dukes Joe Budden Photo: MTV News At the Detroit stops of Jay-Z and Eminem’s Home and Home Tour , there was undeniable crowd support for another hip-hop crew: rap supergroup Slaughterhouse. The team’s New Jersey representative Joe Budden credits a lot of the Midwest love not only to group member and Detroit native Royce Da 5’9″, but also to the support the collective has received from Motor City megastar Eminem. “We get a lot of support out there in the D,” Budden told MTV News. “I attribute a lot of it to just Royce and Em.” Budden said that, despite Eminem’s superstar status, he still has love for the purest elements of the hip-hop art form. The Mood Muzik spitter said Slaughterhouse stand for those same rap essentials, which endears the foursome to the hip-hop luminary. “Em, to be as successful as he is, and I’ll just tell this to anybody with two ears, or one ear for that matter, is just one of the most supportive hip-hop people that I’ve met,” he said. “He’s really, really just into hip-hop and rap and lyrics. He’s just really into all of the things that group was built around.” Although Eminem and the Slaughterhouse crew see eye-to-eye creatively, bringing Budden, Royce, Crooked I and Joell Ortiz into the Shady fold has been an ongoing saga. Earlier this year, Ortiz spoke with MTV News about finalizing a deal with Em. “We in the ninth inning of it, we just keep changing pitchers,” the Brooklyn MC said in May. “I don’t know, man — it’s a lot of hold-ups. I thought on my end I was straight, but I wasn’t. We’re going back and forth with the people I’m working with. Joe [Budden] had some issues or whatever. The interest is still there. Everybody is excited about it; it’s just a lot of people involved in this. Four artists, four separate managers, label situations — a lot of black and white that gotta get settled for it to happen, but verbally, we’re on Shady! Eminem is excited, the whole group is excited. The world is excited. I can’t even do a show without somebody asking that. Without them being, ‘You ripped it, what’s up with Em?’ Everybody is waiting on this, so it’s going to happen. It’s going to happen.” What do you think about Joe Budden’s thoughts about Eminem? Let us know in the comments! Related Artists Joe Budden Eminem Slaughterhouse

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Joe Budden Credits Eminem With Slaughterhouse’s Detroit Love

VH1 Star Nails ‘Big Brother’ Star in Reality Sex Show

TMZ has learned … four ex-reality stars from CBS , MTV and VH1 have agreed to get butt ass naked for an X-rated, uncensored TV show … and three of them even have sex. Sources close to the production of Playboy TV’s reality show ” Foursome ” tell us… Read more

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VH1 Star Nails ‘Big Brother’ Star in Reality Sex Show

SXSW Tribute Concert Celebrates Alex Chilton’s Life And Work

Members of R.E.M., Meat Puppets, She & Him join the rest of Big Star to remember the late Chilton. By James Montgomery Alex Chilton Photo: Frank Mullen/ Wireimage AUSTIN, Texas — It was unseasonably cold deep in the heart of Texas on Saturday night, as winds howled and low-hanging clouds swallowed up the moon. It was the kind of weather that seems to lend itself to mourning. But inside venerable Austin blues bar Antone’s, mourning wasn’t on the menu (there were, however, tacos). Instead, friends, colleagues and disciples of the late Alex Chilton, who died earlier this week of an apparent heart attack, had gathered to pay tribute to the man and his music. And while there were a few tears shed, this was a night very much dedicated to celebration. Originally scheduled as a South by Southwest closing concert by Chilton’s influential power-pop band Big Star, the Antone’s gig instead became a memorial show . Original Star drummer Jody Stephens and newer members Ken Stringfellow and Jon Auer (who joined the band when it reformed in 1993) served as a house band as a host of top-flight talent sat in to perform Chilton’s songs and celebrate his life. Canceling the show was never an option. Before things got under way, Stephens addressed the crowd, telling them he was “stunned and shocked” by Chilton’s passing, and thanked the Austin musical community for its outpouring of support in the days following his death. He said his heart went out to Chilton’s wife, Laura, and a letter she had written for the evening was read. In the note, Laura Chilton remembered her husband as a “spontaneous, honest and generous man … who usually befriended the underdogs.” The letter brought tears to those onstage and in the audience, but as soon as Stephens was joined by Stringfellow and Auer, the sadness stopped. The trio welcomed Meat Puppet Curt Kirkwood to the stage to play guitar and sing on a stomping pair of Big Star classics — “Don’t Lie to Me” and “In the Street.” Up next was guitarist/producer Chris Stamey, who played with Chilton early in his career and went on to form jangle-pop outfit the dBs. The quartet launched into “I Am the Cosmos” (written by late Big Star member Chris Bell), highlighted by a weeping Stamey guitar solo, and “When My Baby’s Beside Me.” She & Him’s M.Ward appeared next (Auer introduced him as “a guy who used to take karate lessons with Alex”) to do a somber, acoustic version of “Big Black Car.” Then original Star bassist Andy Hummel — who left the band shortly before the release of their 1974 album, Radio City — picked up a guitar, and as die-hard fans cheered wildly, the foursome took on “Way Out West.” R.E.M. bassist Mike Mills sang lead on an effervescent “Jesus Christ.” John Doe from X did the same on “I’m in Love With a Girl,” and 27-year-old Norwegian singer Sondre Lerche turned in perhaps the night’s finest performance, a bell-clear and big-voiced turn on the classic “The Ballad of el Goodo,” which left the crowd shouting their approval. Evan Dando performed a brief acoustic tribute. Surly singer-songwriter Chuck Prophet blasted through “Thank You Friends,” and then, finally, the tribute entered the homestretch. Auer thanked Chilton’s friends for performing, and the crowd for their support, then announced, “We’ve exhausted our supply of songs, except for this last one.” And then, with Mills, Hummel, singer Susan Cowsill, and the Watson Twins joining them onstage, the band began playing the wistful, wonderful “September Gurls,” all joining forces on the chorus and letting the guitars ring loudly. The crowd called out for more, but that was it. Stephens, Auer and Stringfellow embraced, bowed and disappeared offstage. Seconds later, as the crowd clapped and a spotlight shone on a lone microphone stand, Stephens reappeared and addressed the crowd once more, thanking them for the wonderful memories and their unyielding support for the band as they struggle with the loss of their friend. “You’ve wrapped your arms around us,” Stephens said, choking up a bit. “We appreciate it.” Related Artists R.E.M. She and Him Meat Puppets

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SXSW Tribute Concert Celebrates Alex Chilton’s Life And Work

N.E.R.D.’s Sound Is ‘Very 3-D’ With New Singer Rhea, Pharrell Says

‘We can go in so many more directions, because we have the vocal support,’ he says of addition. By Jayson Rodriguez N.E.R.D. Photo: Jun Sato/ WireImage Pharrell’s falsetto can only go so far

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N.E.R.D.’s Sound Is ‘Very 3-D’ With New Singer Rhea, Pharrell Says

Jay-Z, Sean Paul, LMFAO, More Mix It Up At L.A. Powerhouse Show

Black Eyed Peas make surprise appearance at culturally diverse concert. By Ryan Ford Jay-Z performs at the Power 106 Powerhouse Concert in Anaheim on Saturday Photo: Jared Milgrim/FilmMagic ANAHEIM, California — It seemed like a perfect opportunity for the lines to be drawn.

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Jay-Z, Sean Paul, LMFAO, More Mix It Up At L.A. Powerhouse Show