Tag Archives: demo

Britney Spears’ ‘Hold It Against Me’: More Details Emerge

Single will premiere at midnight Tuesday. By Jocelyn Vena Cover art for Britney Spears’ “Hold It Against Me” Photo: Jive Want to know what time you’ll be able to hear Britney Spears’ final cut of “Hold It Against Me” ? Well, according to a press release from her label, Jive Records, the song will hit radio and iTunes at midnight ET on Tuesday, days after a demo version of the club tune leaked online. The song will remain an iTunes exclusive purchase for a week, until January 18. “Hold It Against Me,” produced by Dr. Luke and Max Martin, is the lead single from Brit’s highly anticipated, yet-untitled March release . “Heard an early demo of my new single leaked. If u think that’s good, wait til you hear the real one Tuesday,” the pop star tweeted . “With her vocals on that, it’s going to be an undeniable, surefire hit,” Perez Hilton told MTV News about the demo, which features vocals from songwriter Bonnie McKee. “I loved it. My own critique is that the demo sounds a little too much like Ke$ha. I hope that the finished song feels like a Britney song. Besides that, it’s still to me a hit song.” Luke admitted that the track that has everyone talking already will really have fans hyped once the final version drops. “That version of hold it against me is really really old,” he shared. “It don’t sound like that anymore… it’s WAY better.” The “Hold It Against Me” leak is the latest in a long history of leaked Britney songs . In the past, other Spears lead singles like “Womanizer” (off 2008’s Circus ) and “Gimme More” (off 2007’s Blackout ) also hit the Net early, only gaining the singer more buzz for those releases. What are you expecting from Brit’s new single? Let us know in the comments!

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Britney Spears’ ‘Hold It Against Me’: More Details Emerge

Britney Spears’ New Single Is A ‘Surefire Hit,’ Perez Hilton Says

Ryan Seacrest, who has heard the final cut of ‘Hold It Against Me,’ also gives the tune his seal of approval. By Jocelyn Vena Perez Hilton Photo: Frazer Harrison/ WireImage The demo for Britney Spears’ new single, “Hold It Against Me,” that hit the Web on Thursday is catching people’s attention, and it seems clear that the pop star wants everyone to hit the dance floor and party. The unfinished track, which feature the vocals of songwriter Bonnie McKee rather than Brit herself, is a dirty, grinding club banger with pulsing beats and lustful lyrics. The track already has the media talking. “With her vocals on that it’s going to be an undeniable, surefire hit,” Perez Hilton told MTV News . “I loved it. My own critique is that the demo sounds a little too much like Ke$ha. I hope that the finished song feels like a Britney song. Beside that it’s still to me a hit song.” Perez’s Ke$ha comparison likely can be attributed to the work of Dr. Luke. And the gossip guru’s further evaluation of the tune draws parallels to another Luke production. “It’s not inspired. It’s not groundbreaking,” Perez explains, noting that this isn’t necessarily a bad thing, especially considering he’s only heard the demo. “It’s like Katy Perry’s ‘California Gurls’; I think this is the equivalent.” Perez isn’t the only one giving “Hold It Against Me” his seal of approval. Ryan Seacrest revealed that Britney’s managers, Larry Rudolf and Adam Leber, played him the finished version of the track , and he insisted that if fans are stoked about the demo, then they should just be over the moon about the final cut. “@BritneySpears just sent me ‘Hold It Against Me.’ WOW. The demo doesn’t even compare!” he wrote on Twitter . Seacrest added that Britney’s video for the tune is set to shoot in two weeks, after a month of rehearsals, noting that it’s “gonna be major.” He also reported that Rudolf and Leber played him another track off the singer’s March release, “I I I Wanna Go,” but gave little details about the song besides describing it as a “powerhouse single.” Related Photos The Evolution Of: Britney Spears Related Artists Britney Spears

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Britney Spears’ New Single Is A ‘Surefire Hit,’ Perez Hilton Says

Britney Spears’ ‘Hold It Against Me’ Drops On Tuesday

Pop superstar has been rehearsing choreography for a month for the clip, which will be shot in two weeks. By James Dinh Britney Spears Photo: Ethan Miller/ Getty Images After days of speculation and a churning rumor mill, Britney Spears has come forth to set the record straight about her upcoming single, “Hold It Against Me.” Produced by Dr. Luke and Max Martin, the high-energy tune, a demo of which surfaced on the Internet on Thursday, is set to hit airwaves on Tuesday, she tweeted. “Heard an early demo of my new single leaked. If u think that’s good, wait til you hear the real one Tuesday,” Spears wrote on Twitter Thursday night. She also posted the track’s artwork , a close-up of the pop princess’ face partially covered by her blond locks. “Hold It Against Me” is the lead single from Britney’s currently untitled new album , dropping in March. In the leaked demo of the scorching club track, singer/songwriter Bonnie McKee sings Spears’ part. She proclaims her lust for a person while surrounded by a crowd of people. “If I feel my heart was beating loud/ If we could escape the crowd somehow/ If I said I want your body now/ Would you hold it against me?/ ‘Cause you feel like paradise/ And I need a vacation tonight/ If I said I want your body now/ Would you hold it against me?” she sings over a pulsating bass. The track’s producer cautioned that the demo is a very early version of the song. “That version of hold it against me is really really old… it don’t sound like that anymore… it’s WAY better :-p,” Dr. Luke tweeted . What do you think about the demo for “Hold It Against Me?” Share your reviews in the comments below! Related Photos The Evolution Of: Britney Spears Related Artists Britney Spears

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Britney Spears’ ‘Hold It Against Me’ Drops On Tuesday

Is This Britney Spears’ Demo of Lady Gaga’s ‘Telephone’? An Analysis [Evaluation]

The purported Britney Spears demo of “Telephone”—originally written for Spears by Lady Gaga before Gaga hit it big—has leaked. That sound you just heard was “BritBrit” overtaking “Bieber” on Twitter. We have the track, and some theories. More

Chelsea Handler Sex Tape: Revealed, Possibly a Joke

Chelsea Handler made a sex tape. That much is clear. What’s unclear is what its purpose was. The Chelsea Lately host’s rep, Stephen Huvane, claimed it was all part of a comedy bit. A sexy comedy bit. Viewing the Chelsea Handler sex tape makes that explanation highly questionable, however, as both Chelsea and her partner are both very naked. The action is clearly not simulated, either. The tape, which was made nearly a decade ago after Chelsea moved to Los Angeles starts out with Chelsea turning on the camera in her apartment. She begins by introducing herself by name before going into a stand-up routine before we suddenly cut right on over to Chelsea Handler nude, having intercourse. Chelsea, who is on all fours on a bed is naked and at several times during the filming she looks directly at the camera whilst in the midst of the act. At the end of the “performance” Chelsea’s partner speaks in a clear British accent, asking, “Did we get the (bleep) shot?” You always gotta get that . Chelsea looks into the camera and smiles at this point. Then the tape immediately cuts back into Chelsea continuing her stand-up routine at home. Reached for comment by Radar Online , Chelsea’s rep Huvane said: “The tape you have is an old tape that was done for a stand up comedy bit.” He indicated that Chelsea would address it on her E! show … but from what we’ve seen, if it’s a routine, it’s the most X-rated routine of all time. The unnamed source that leaked the sex tape said the following : “This is an old tape Chelsea had put together just a couple years after moving out to Hollywood when she was trying to make it as a comedienne.” “Chelsea gave this demo tape to a bunch of talent agents and managers hoping to book some gigs,” the source continues. “It was taken so long ago and distributed on old VHS tapes, that I’m sure most people just threw them out.” “Her stand-up was so bad and they didn’t realize she would make it big one day. It’s highly possible that many of the recipients of the tape didn’t even watch past the first couple of minutes and missed the sex tape part altogether.” So … cover up of a sex tape or a comedy routine with explicit sex? You decide … and we imagine Michelle McGee has some thoughts on the matter.

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Chelsea Handler Sex Tape: Revealed, Possibly a Joke

Wicked Hip Hop » Biggie Smalls – The Notorious Demo | VX50.com

online marketing Its march 9th rest in peace BIG, thought I would add his demo tape. t&…

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Wicked Hip Hop » Biggie Smalls – The Notorious Demo | VX50.com

Yeasayer Lead Us Through Odd Blood, Track By Track

After hitting stores Tuesday, it’s already being heralded as a top album of the year. By James Montgomery Yeasayer Photo: MTV News Those in the know have been buzzing about Yeasayer’s Odd Blood for months now, ever since the Brooklyn avant-pop aesthetes released the first single, a delightfully loopy slab of weirdness called “Ambling Alp.” Since then, both the band and the album have slowly started picking up accolades (we highlighted them last month during MTV News’ Rock Week ), and now, it’s not inconceivable to think that Blood might be this year’s version of Merriweather Post Pavilion, the Animal Collective effort that was already being hailed “The Best Album of 2009” from the day it was released in January. Blood hit stores Tuesday (February 9), and so, to highlight an album that we really think you ought to hear, we sat down with the three men behind Yeasayer — Anand Wilder, Chris Keating and Ira Wolf Tuton — and had them tell us the stories behind the 10 wonderfully weird tracks that make up the record. From in-flight make-out sessions and ridiculous riddims of Haddaway to Moroccan dance music, here’s their take on what very well may be the best album of 2010. “The Children” Chris Keating : We were pretty determined to have it first on the record. I like the idea of starting the record like that, as a departure point from the last record [2007’s All Hour Cymbals ], especially the last song on the last record, which was very choral, and then all of a sudden, you’re transported to further into the future, and you’re on some off-world colony that has crazy percussion and slowed-down vocals. We sang harmonies through a fan, sang into the pitch thing and tried to sing it live. Ira Wolf Tuton : I couldn’t get through the mixes. It kept making my CD player skip because of the low end. I loved that. Keating : Yeah, we definitely buried some sub beneath the sub. “Ambling Alp” Tuton : That song probably existed between the three of us longer than any other song on the album, so just psychologically, it made sense for us to release it first and try to get it out of the way. Keating : I think the hardest thing about writing a song is getting that initial idea: “What’s an interesting thing to write about?” And once you get that, you roll with it. You get excited … so I kind of came up with this idea to write about boxing, and that’s where the title came from; it was [the name of] a 1930s Italian boxer . I was reading about Joe Louis at the time, and my grandfather was a professional boxer in the late ’30s, early ’40s, so all these things kind of started tying together. “Madder Red” Anand Wilder : It was a kind of quiet, folky, acoustic lullaby that I worked on. I think I stole a lyric out of, like, a Celtic book of verse for the first line and kind of went from there. I kind of wanted to write a song in the vein of “Jealous Guy” by John Lennon, a song about being a weak man, a gambler or something like that. So we had that basic structure for the opening, and then Chris had the idea to drop this really heavy beat on top of it. And it completely changed the feel of the song. “I Remember” Keating : It was a demo recording, made in the basement — the same setup we had when we were making the All Hour Cymbals record. And I just had my busted-up Nord [keyboard], and I just kind of worked out these weird sounds that I thought were interesting together. And a lot of stuff I do like that, I’m trying to achieve a sound I like. And you get that tone, then it’s cool. You lock it in, you write down all the numbers and all the dials, and from there, I know I can write something on top of it. And I had just met my wife, and I started writing a love song, so I kind of just ran with it. I’m afraid of flying, but the first time I met my wife, we made out on a plane. Wilder : My only input was to try and steer us away from adding too much to it, because I think Chris did a really good job of getting these tones that really sat well in the mix. And it was just this demo that really sounded almost finished. And slowly we began adding on to it, and we did a live version and made it twice as long, and then we made compromises, and eventually it became the four-and-a-half-minute-long mixtape love ballad of 2010. “O.N.E.” Wilder : I was trying to explore the idea of a song that didn’t just have one chord in it. Because a lot of songs on the first album had maybe just one chord in it, or maybe just two chords. Maybe we’d go to three in the chorus. So I created this really long riff that went on for about 16 bars and had chords that were changing along with the riff. And then I had this idea about writing a song about addiction — alcoholism — but kind of relating it to a way you’d get rid of a girlfriend or something. So we worked on that song for many months Upstate, in Woodstock, and threw a big beat over it. It became kind of like a early-’90s era Beck song, with a break beat over it. And then when we brought it to the live setting, with our new bandmates, Chris kind of said, “It’s not a dance song,” and we were talking about how, on this album, we wanted to commit to certain styles for an entire song and not jump around. So, finally, I caved in. I only caved in after the Bonnaroo audience was so excited by our live version, and I was like, “OK, I guess I lost that argument.” Keating : That was a cool experience, because we hadn’t finished the record. … We were able to play some songs at different festivals. And the ones we’d be really excited about, it was like, “Why does no one care about this song?” … And that one, the way we were doing it live, with a funkier vibe to it, we were all psyched on, everyone was really, really into it. … They were singing the words to an MGMT song over it. [ Laughs. ] “Love Me Girl” Wilder : I wanted to do this loopy thing that would go over and over again, kind of like that final scene in “Trainspotting,” and then it would just drop into this R&B, Justin Timberlake-y kind of thing, which I made the melody by just creating MIDI notes on GarageBand with just a flute. That had some acoustic guitar on it … but then when we brought it Upstate, we added more synthetic elements, and we kind of decided the beat was going to be a dancehall thing, because we were listening to a lot [of it] and just kind of straight ripped off those songs. Tuton : It was exciting to do, another new thing to rip off. Wilder : We added some Real McCoy elements and some Haddaway elements. “Rome” Keating : That’s the song with the Coldplay reference [in the lyrics]. That’s not a Coldplay reference. But that’s cool, because we’re trying to start a little beef with Coldplay. Wilder : We’re trying to rip off Coldplay so they would sue us, so they would have someone to sue. Keating : That song sort of rips off certain Moroccan dance music, Syrian dance music, that my wife had on her iPod, and when she hears the song now, she sort of shakes her head like, “It’s such a rip-off.” She feels like she’s responsible for that one. “Strange Reunions” Keating : That song gets sh– on in the press, and I don’t know why, because I think that song is awesome. It’s so crazy. Like “And the throwaway track … ” and it’s like, that song is so weird and crazy. Wilder : We got really stoned and listened to the album once it was pretty much fully mixed, and that was the one song where I was like, “This is awesome!” … That was based on the idea of a really short song that had many different parts in it … and it would all be done in under three minutes and would also explore these weird time-signature shifts that bands like the Dirty Projectors do so effortlessly. And we’re so unskilled that we still haven’t figured out how to play it live. And we probably never will. “Mondegreen” Keating : That’s a song that I had been working on for a while. … It’s really old. I set up a bunch of samplers and plugged them all into the TV for a whole Sunday, and I got, like, four channels, didn’t have cable or anything, so it was all, like, daytime Sunday weirdness, bad commercials, infomercials, soap operas, I don’t know what. And I recorded four banks of sound and started to structure a song out of it. And I sang on top of it. I thought it was cool to make this real paranoid. … I liked the late-’70s era of David Bowie that’s very paranoid, where he’s, like, so coke-addled and crazy, and I like that kind of feel, and mixing it with the sort of 24-hour news cycle, and Glenn Beck and Hannity, the sort of absurd, psychotic rants that those guys go on. I sort of think it’s amazing, because it just seems like something out of the movie “Network.” I don’t know; the world is going to end in a year. “Grizelda” Tuton : I kind of think of “Grizelda” in the same way that I really like “Children” being the first track. I thought of it for a long time as being a real nice benediction for the whole album. It just seemed a nice way to close an album. It lulls you into sitting back in your chair, puts you in a trance a bit, although the subject matter might be a bit dark. Wilder : The subject matter is this woman Griselda Blanco. We had watched the movie “Cocaine Cowboys,” and it was kind of all about the cocaine industry in Miami and how it was relatively violence-free, until this woman Griselda Blanco came around and just started ordering murders. And she’s responsible for hundreds of murders. … So the main interview of the whole movie is this guy who was a hit man for her, so I thought it would be nice to write a song from his perspective. Maybe he’s in jail, and he’s writing a letter to her, just as she’s been extradited to Colombia, and all these people are coming to kill her. He’s kind of afraid of her, but he’s also kind of in love with her. Keating : She’s like the Colombian connection to America’s cocaine industry in the ’80s, just ruthless. So it’s like this female mass murderer and had all these guys working for her who were kind of in love with her. Related Videos Yeasayer’s Odd Blood Track By Track

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Yeasayer Lead Us Through Odd Blood, Track By Track

Grammy Ratings Get A Boost From Lady Gaga, Michael Jackson Tribute

Awards show draws 26.6 million viewers, up 35 percent from last year. By Gil Kaufman Lady Gaga performs at the 2010 Grammys Photo: Kevin Winter/ Getty Images It should be no surprise that major wins and performances by some of last year’s biggest-selling artists helped lift the ratings for Sunday night’s 52nd annual Grammy Awards . A buzz-inducing performance from Lady Gaga and Elton John , a stunning aerial show from Pink and talked-about nominations for Taylor Swift and Beyonc

‘Jersey Shore’ Returns For Season Two This Summer

Pauly D, Mike, Snooki, Jenni, Sammi, Ronnie and Vinny will find themselves in a new destination. By MTV News staff The cast of “Jersey Shore” Photo: Scott Gries/ Picture Group The “Jersey Shore” gang is coming back! MTV’s breakout series will return for a second season this summer with 12 new episodes, it was announced on Saturday (January 30) by MTV President of Programming Tony DiSanto.

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‘Jersey Shore’ Returns For Season Two This Summer

Print Media’s Big Tablet Letdown

No doubt, Steve Jobs showed off a compelling tablet computer today, one that should excite people who make videogames, TV shows — even books. But today’s Apple iPad debut was a big letdown for magazine and newspaper people. Look, expectations were fairly insane

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Print Media’s Big Tablet Letdown