Hot Joint of the Day: Beastie Boys – “Make Some Noise” The lead single off the Brooklyn trio’s long-awaited eighth studio album, Hot Sauce Committee, Pt. 2 , which officially drops May 3 via Capitol. [ cos .] Broadcasting platform : YouTube Source : The Daily What Discovery Date : 06/04/2011 18:58 Number of articles : 3
Some say the movie chronicling Conan’s ouster from NBC is funnier than his show. By Eric Ditzian Conan O’Brien Photo: Noel Vasquez/ Getty Four months removed from the debut of his TBS late-night show, Conan O’Brien swept into the South by Southwest film festival over the weekend, a bit reluctantly, to promote a documentary cataloguing the fallout from his “Tonight Show” firing and his subsequent creative resurrection via a live comedy tour. Called “Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop,” the doc begins by recapping his NBC ouster and follows the comedian and his team as they come up with the comedy tour idea, build it from the ground up and then head out on the road. O’Brien has already largely moved on from these sordid events, but for one evening, he was compelled to relive the juicy late-night scandal and his reaction to it, which was not always as high-minded as he might have hoped. A few reviews, as well as O’Brien’s own comments about the project, have already hit the Web, so read on for some early insight into “Can’t Stop.” The Overview “What starts out as a sanity-restoring make-work project evolves into a highly entertaining cross-country extravaganza during the course of ‘Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop,’ an up-close account of the former ‘Tonight Show’ host’s two-month, 32-city comedy-and-music variety-show tour shortly after he parted ways with NBC in 2010. But the biggest laughs and most intriguing revelations are provided offstage in this slickly produced documentary, as O’Brien — often pushing himself to the point of exhaustion before, during and after performances — plays for keeps while playing for laughs.” — Joe Leydon, Variety The Laughs “Conan O’Brien should take some satisfaction in the thought that Jay Leno will never earn as much laughter in half an hour as he and his crew does in the first third of ‘Conan O’Brien Can’t Stop.’ To be fair, O’Brien’s TV talk show was rarely if ever this full-tilt hilarious, either, which might have something to do with why he seems to have so many more supporters than the program had viewers. But ‘Can’t Stop’ is as entertaining as any showbiz doc in recent memory and could draw a nice audience of Team Coco followers in a limited theatrical release.” — John DeFore, The Hollywood Reporter Conan, In His Own Words, Part I “I personally have trouble watching it because it’s a time in my life that I don’t like to go back to. I’m happy where I am now. I don’t really need to go back to it. But I made a commitment.” — O’Brien, in an Associated Press interview Conan, In His Own Words, Part II “I’ve done thousands of hours of television, and they get a sense of you, but you’re really only on TV for an hour, and this is seeing these other sides of me. It’s funny, because my staff, they saw this and they said, ‘Oh, we get to see a little bit of Mean Conan.’ And they said, ‘Mean Conan, he’s our favorite, he’s the funniest Conan.’ Which is weird. There’s a way in which, after our meetings sometimes, I’ll talk about the show and I’ll just go on these long riffs, which are over-the-top, sarcastic about everything, and people will be laughing really hard while I’m saying negative things about the show. I’m really hard on myself, I get very dark. I tease people constantly. I physically fight my writers, and they fight me back. And so it’s this gear I have that I’ve used sometimes on television but really hardly at all. There’s all of this stuff there that I think, well, if not now, when? Might as well let people know he exists.” — Conan O’Brien, in a New York Times interview
Long-awaited album will drop May 3, Adam Yauch and Mike D announce. By Gil Kaufman The Beastie Boys’ Hot Sauce Committee Part Two Photo: Capitol After several delays caused by member Adam Yauch’s cancer battle , the Beastie Boys are ready to unleash their long-awaited Hot Sauce Committee Part Two album. Yauch made the announcement Sunday on the band’s official website , writing, “Since the dawn of time, and perhaps even before, there was a silent order who were tasked with a mission. They held their secret tightly. On May 3rd the Hot Sauce Committee Part Two will be unleashed on the general public. Hold fast ye heathens.” Mike D followed up on Monday with a post that revealed the album’s cover art, a series of colorful geometric shapes that looks like a pixilated collage. As previously reported, the track listing for the group’s seventh studio album is: “Tadlock’s Glasses,” “B-Boys In The Cut,” “Make Some Noise,” “Nonstop Disco Powerpack,” “OK,” “Too Many Rappers (feat. Nas),” “Say It,” “The Bill Harper Collection,” “Don’t Play No Game That I Can’t Win (feat. Santigold),” “Long Burn The Fire,” “Funky Donkey,” “Lee Majors Come Again,” “Multilateral Nuclear Disarmament,” “Pop Your Balloon,” “Crazy Ass S—” and “Here’s a Little Something For Ya.” The trio recently made a splash at the Sundance Film Festival, where a short directed by Yauch called “Fight for Your Right Revisited” debuted. The remake of the iconic 1987 video stars Elijah Wood, Danny McBride and Seth Rogen , and features exact replicas of the Boys’ outfits from the original house partying clip. After being diagnosed with cancer of the salivary gland in the summer of 2009, Yauch underwent surgery and treatment and said last spring that he was ready to get back to work. “I feel better,” Yauch said last March . “It was touch and go there for a while, but I am finally getting my energy back.” Yauch announced on July 20, 2009 that the discovery of the cancer would necessitate the canceling of all of the Beasties’ planned summer-festival appearances and push back their new album, then called Hot Sauce Committee, Part One , while he underwent treatment. According to a band spokesperson, because the cancer was discovered early and localized in an area that does not affect Yauch’s vocal cords, it was believed the surgery was successful.
Posted onDecember 15, 2010byBenny Hollywood|Comments Off on Alice Cooper, Neil Diamond Among Rock And Roll Hall Of Fame Inductees
Tom Waits, Dr. John also made the list. By Gil Kaufman Alice Cooper Photo: Kevork Djansezian/ Getty Images This year’s list of Rock and Roll Hall of Fame inductees offers a musical cornucopia of styles. From the New Orleans boogie woogie voodoo soul of Dr. John to Tom Waits’ boho preacher-poet performance art, Neil Diamond’s overwrought pop histrionics, Darlene Love’s girl-group R&B and Alice Cooper’s goth/glam rock theater of the macabre, the Hall of Fame class of 2011 is set to take the stage for their honors on March 14 at the Waldorf-Astoria Hotel in New York. With the exception of Waits, all of the inductees are first-time nominees. While all are probably popping corks now, that means, of course, that a number of younger acts didn’t make the list. These include multiple nominees the Beastie Boys and LL Cool J, first-time nominee Bon Jovi and veteran acts J. Geils Band, Donna Summer and Chic. Cooper, 62, whose onstage theatrics include macabre set pieces such as guillotines and gallows, told Billboard that he felt it was about time his band got a nod. “I’ve always felt the same way about this whole thing,” said Cooper, whose classic hits includes “I’m Eighteen” and “School’s Out,” teenage rebellion anthems for the ages recorded by a band he started 45 years ago in high school. “I kind of sat back and said, ‘It will happen eventually.’ ” Artists are eligible for induction 25 years after the release of their first single or album. Diamond told Rolling Stone that he was proud to join the institution. “I think it’s great. I’m happy that they recognized me and my work,” he said. “Any club that has Chuck Berry and Little Richard and the Everly Brothers is a club that I want to be a part of.” The 69-year-old crooner best known for hits such as “Cherry, Cherry,” “Sweet Caroline” and “Song Sung Blue” was not nearly as surprised by the honor as Love, who told the magazine that she was on her way to play a private Christmas party in Atlantic City when she found out. “I was just stunned for a minute. … I was laughing and crying at the same time. I’m still on cloud nine,” said Love, who is best known for her work with imprisoned “Wall of Sound” producer Phil Spector on such early 1960s hits as “He’s a Rebel” and “Christmas (Baby Please Come Home).” Related Artists Alice in Chains Neil Diamond
A fan tribute video that unites a super-nerd love of both Battlestar Galactica and The Beastie Boys' Sabotage video. Copied nearly shot-for-shot. YES. Watch
Hudson, DJ A-Trak say West is keeping a low profile but doing fine. By James Dinh Kanye West Photo: Stefania D’Alessandro/ Getty Images Apart from some lingering backlash from his interruption of Taylor Swift’s acceptance speech at the Video Music Awards, a false death rumor and some quotes from Muhammad Ali posted on his blog, Kanye West ‘s profile has been low in recent weeks.
Sidelined with cancer in his throat, Adam ‘MCA’ Yauch, and the rest of the Beastie Boys, were forced to cancel a few concert dates, including their headlining show at the All Points West Festival in Jersey City, NJ this weekend.