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Patrick Stump Premieres, Hole Returns, Muse Reigns In The Rain: Friday At SXSW

‘This is totally amateur and I don’t care,’ Courtney Love said from the stage at the South by Southwest festival. By James Montgomery Patrick Stump performs at SXSW in Austin on Friday Photo: Daniel Boczarski/Redferns AUSTIN, Texas — “Hi. I’m Patrick.” That’s how Patrick Stump, former Fall Out Boy frontman/ current poster boy for portion-control dieting (I mean, have you seen the dude lately?) kicked off his solo career, one song into his much-discussed South by Southwest set. It was a brief, seemingly needless introduction — everyone was here to see him, after all — yet it was somewhat fitting too. He’s always been a man of few words. It was one of the few times he actually spoke to the audience at Austin’s dive-licious Dirty Dog Bar, preferring instead to let his new music do the talking for him. And for the most part, that music didn’t let him down. It was funky, it was soulful, it was a pretty nice preview of what fans can expect to hear on his upcoming solo album, which, based solely on Friday night’s set, is shaping up to be perhaps the greatest ’80s R&B album since, well, the ’80s. It wasn’t all silky smooth though. Stump’s big “one-man band” concept (just him, two guitars, a keyboard and organ, a drum kit, and some samplers) stumbled out of the gate, as opener “As Long As I Know I’m Getting Paid” was marred by sound problems and a general lack of rehearsal time, but things got progressively better from there. A pair of new songs (one a slinky electronic track featuring him keening “I’ve got nothing to confess,” the other a shuffling, funky number with looped drums, handclaps and scratchy guitars) got the night headed in the right direction, and Stump knew it too, loosening up and cracking a smile. And with his mood sufficiently lifted, Stump took things to the next level. Sliding over to the electric organ, he eased his way into a track that worked in Bobby Womack’s “If You Think You’re Lonely Now,” then morphed into an R&B space jam, full of crashing drums, baying organ and Stump’s pained falsetto. He belted out lines like “I’m not brokenhearted, I’m just kind of pissed off,” pulled a winging guitar solo out of his fretboard, then let the song fall away for just a second, before bringing the beat back with a decidedly sexy grunt. It was a tantalizing preview of things to come, for sure. And then, as the crowd whistled their approval, he simply said, “Done,” saluted and walked offstage. There really wasn’t much else to say. After all, he’s a man of few words. The same, however, could not be said about Courtney Love, who took the stage a few hours after Stump with her newest incarnation of Hole (basically a collection of guys with creative hair and adventurous beards) and spent much of the next 50-something minutes doing nothing but talking. About the lousy in-house sound system, her crappy hotel room, and the general suckiness of everything and everyone. “I’m doing this for me, not you. If you don’t like it, suck it,” she sneered at the beginning of her set, before launching into a medley that started with Buffy Sainte Marie’s “Cod’ine,” shifted into the Rolling Stones’ “Sympathy for the Devil,” and finally settled into “Skinny Little Bitch,” the first single off Hole’s upcoming Nobody’s Daughter album. That was followed by a rant about her guitar picks (“They’re making my fingers bleed. They’re for, like, Lindsey Buckingham.”) and some complaining about the state of her voice, which had been ravaged earlier in the day during Hole’s set at Stubb’s and prevented her from howling in the way most are accustomed to. Then she had problems tuning her guitar, which led to her spitting, “This is totally amateur and I don’t care,” before finally playing Hole’s landmark 1994 single, “Doll Parts.” “I’m really sorry that we suck, but actually, I’m not, because I’m doing this for me,” she laughed at song’s end. “So enjoy the f—ing suckage, because it’s 1 a.m. and I’m an elderly person.” And perhaps this would be a good time to mention that, for all her nastiness, Love’s set actually had its fair share of standout moments. “Malibu” was picture pretty (for Hole, anyway), “Northern Star” was stunning, featuring just Love’s ragged voice and the acoustic work of guitarist Micko Larkin, and a new song about tawdry Saturday night sex and rainy Sunday mornings stopped pretty much everyone dead in their tracks. But all in all, it was a pretty rough outing, full of awkward onstage squabbles, petty whining and more than a few garbled notes. As Love herself put it at set’s end: “Worst f—ing show of my entire life. So glad you could be here for it.” Of course, immediately after she said that, she collapsed onstage, and, as a million iPhones snapped away, had to be carried by security to the bar, where she righted herself and downed a Budweiser. You know, just your average Friday night in Courtney-land. And finally, as all this drama was unfolding on Sixth Street, the night’s third can’t-miss act, Muse, were busy positively destroying the stage down at Stubb’s. Their gig was, in theory, a secret, thrown by the good folks at MySpace Music and Spin magazine, though by 7 p.m., pretty much everyone in Austin knew about it, and the line to get in already stretched well down Red River Street. Muse didn’t take the stage until after 10 p.m., but they more than made up for the wait, launching headlong into an ultra-riffy “Uprising” and a superb “Supermassive Black Hole,” then keeping the energy high with “Resistance” and “Hysteria.” Frontman Matthew Bellamy joked with the crowd (“I can feel the good vibes in this city”), shredded through a Hendrix-y version of “The Star-Spangled Banner,” and even broke out the keytar. There were lasers and lights and booming soundscapes, and not even a little rain could dampen the mood of everyone in attendance — even those who were forced to listen to the gig from out on Red River. They got epic on “United States of Eurasia” and spacey on “Starlight,” wrapped things up with a harmonica-aided version of “Knights of Cydonia,” and then they were out, nearly as quickly as they came. It left the crowd wanting more, which, on a Friday at SXSW, is more than you could say about 90 percent of the other bands playing around town. Or at least Hole. MTV News is at SXSW all weekend long, so check back for more show reports, interviews and blog posts on what’s going down in Austin. Related Artists Patrick Stump Hole Muse

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Patrick Stump Premieres, Hole Returns, Muse Reigns In The Rain: Friday At SXSW

Michael Jackson Estate Signs Biggest Recording Contract In History

New deal with Sony Music, estimated at $250 million, will include unreleased music, DVDs and video games. By Gil Kaufman Michael Jackson Photo: Sony Even in death, Michael Jackson remains the King of Pop. Less than a year after his shocking passing, the administrators of the late pop icon’s estate have signed the biggest recording contract in music history, a deal that the Los Angeles Times speculated could be worth up to $250 million and include unreleased recordings, DVDs and video games. The seven-year deal with Jackson’s longtime home, Sony Music Entertainment, could cover up to 10 new Jackson projects, though no specific releases were announced on Monday. “We and Sony feel that the future for Michael Jackson is unlimited,” said John Branca, a special administrator for the estate. In a testament to his enduring appeal, the Jackson deal eclipses a number of mega-deals signed by contemporary acts, including Bruce Springsteen’s $110 million deal with Columbia Records in 2005 and Robbie Williams’ $150-million pact with EMI in 2002. According to an anonymous source with knowledge of Jackson’s financial dealings, in the nine months since his death the singer has sold more than 31 million albums at a time when the music industry continues a decade-long album sales slide. In fact, the combination of those sales and other licensing deals cut by Branca have brought in close to $250 million to the estate, which has helped to ease the burden of the nearly $500 million in debt Jackson owed at the time of his death. Rob Stringer, the chairman of Columbia Epic Records, the Sony division that will likely handle the releases, said the recordings will “span across different projects. There may be theater. There may be films and movies. There may be computer games — or multimedia platforms that I don’t know about today that will happen in 2015.” Already in store is a another reissue of Jackson’s solo debut, 1979’s Off the Wall, due next year, with a variety of new, exclusive material. A special edition of that album was re-released in 2001 with a pair of unreleased demos of the songs “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough” and “Workin’ Day and Night.” “The stuff we have in the vaults around that record is fascinating and remarkable,” Stringer said. “We’re going to build a whole platform with a documentary. The outtakes are fantastic! We have a lot of great stuff from around every time period [in Jackson’s career]. We’re plowing through everything now to understand what we’ve got.” The estate’s other executor, John McClain, who worked with Jackson for over 40 years and helped produce the singer’s last studio album, 2001’s Invincible, is compiling an album of previously unreleased material that could be released later this year. “John McClain tells me they’ve got over 60 unreleased recordings that they’re choosing from,” Branca told the Times. “The first album will have around 10. There’s some very recent stuff and vintage stuff that deserves to be shared with Michael’s fans.” Jackson is said to have left behind more than 100 unreleased songs that could be mined for releases for decades in the same way that the recordings of Elvis Presley and Jimi Hendrix have since those performers’ deaths. Related Photos MTV News’ 2009 Men Of The Year: #1 Michael Jackson “Michael Jackson’s This Is It” Related Artists Michael Jackson

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Michael Jackson Estate Signs Biggest Recording Contract In History

Miley Cyrus Says The Internet ‘Wastes Your Life’

‘I was kind of tired of telling everyone what I’m doing,’ Cyrus says about her decision to leave Twitter last year. By Jocelyn Vena Miley Cyrus Photo: Bryan Bedder/Getty Images When Miley Cyrus left Twitter last fall — possibly at her beau and “The Last Song” co-star Liam Hemsworth ‘s request — fans were upset at not being able to keep track of the pop star’s every thought. And while they still may be mourning the loss of Cyrus’ tweets nearly six months after she said goodbye, she doesn’t regret the decision to leave one bit. “I was kind of tired of telling everyone what I’m doing,” Cyrus said in an interview with Movieline . “I hate when I read things and celebrities are complaining like, ‘I have no personal life.’ I’m like, well, that’s because you write everything that you’re doing.” Cyrus said that she realized the only person she was hurting by tweeting every moment of her life was herself. “So I was that person who was like, ‘I’m so sad. I have no real, normal life. Everyone knows what I’m doing.’ And I’m like, well that’s my own fault because I’m telling everyone,” the singer explained. “And then I’d tweet, ‘I’m here,’ and I’d wonder why a thousand fans are outside the restaurant. Well, hel lo, I just told them. So I’m just, like, kind of thinking it doesn’t really make a lot of sense. Everything I’m saying is not really going with what I’m putting on the Internet.” Cyrus explained the benefits of not constantly being on the Internet: “I’m a lot less on my phone, I’m a little bit more social. I have a lot more real friends as opposed to friends who are on the Internet who I’m talking to — which is like not cool, not safe, not fun and most likely not real. I think everything is just better when you’re not so wrapped up in [the Internet]. “I just think it’s kind of lame,” Cyrus added. “I feel like I hang out with my friends and they’re so busy taking pictures of what they’re doing and putting them on Facebook that they’re not really enjoying what they’re doing. You’re going to look back and have a million pictures, but you’re not going to be in any of them. Because you’re not having fun, you’re too busy clicking away. So I think, just enjoy the moment you’re in, and stop telling people about it. Just enjoy it.” And what advice does she have for other teens wrapped up in their online life? Well, simply to get offline and get outside. “I’m telling kids, don’t go on the Internet, it’s dangerous, it’s not fun, it wastes your life,” she said. “And you should be outside playing sports or something.” The singer/actress also revealed that when “Hannah Montana” wraps up after season four , she has no plans to ever play the pop star again. “It’s interesting to leave my security blanket behind. It was such a huge deal in so many kids’ lives,” she said. “[Hannah’s] wig is out. One will be in a museum, and one will be … burned, or something.” Related Artists Miley Cyrus

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Miley Cyrus Says The Internet ‘Wastes Your Life’

Spencer Pratt Still Signed On For ‘The Hills’ Season Six

Though he says he’s taking a break to fight cyber crime, MTV says Pratt is still on the show. By Jocelyn Vena Spencer Pratt Photo: Jason Mitchell/ Getty Images “Hills” fans may have been surprised to learn last week that Spencer Pratt would no longer be managing Heidi Montag’s career, but they were probably more blown away on Monday, when Pratt told People.com that he’d be leaving the reality show behind in order to pursue a career in fighting cyber crime. But though a rep for Pratt confirms that he gave those quotes to the magazine, an MTV spokesperson seemingly contradicted his statement. “Spencer will still be a part of ‘The Hills’ season six, which will air this spring,” the spokesperson told MTV News. “In the last few months I have discovered a new passion and new purpose to my life,” Pratt told People.com , teasing his new career path. “With this in mind, I have decided to take a break from my obligations to MTV’s ‘The Hills’ and discontinue filming any more episodes for this current season.” The 26-year-old told the magazine he is currently studying software engineering with a focus on encryption at USC so that he can work for the American Defense Enterprises in their cyber security division. “Upon learning of President Obama’s declaration that the ‘cyber threat is one of the most serious economic and national security challenges we face as a nation,’ I have decided to refocus my energy and devote my full resources to helping America face this and other unprecedented challenges,” said Pratt, whom Heidi replaced with psychic Aiden Chase as her manager. “My new mission is this: To do my part in maintaining the technological superiority of the U.S. military and prevent emerging technologies from threatening our nation’s security,” he added. “With that being said, I am saddened to take this break from filming MTV’s ‘The Hills.’ At this time, however, I feel I would not be honoring my country or myself if I were to continue this endeavor when I have the opportunity and the ability to assist our nation against these prevalent threats.”

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Spencer Pratt Still Signed On For ‘The Hills’ Season Six

Jessica Simpson Hates Guys Checking Her Out

Jessica Simpson is all self-conscious thanks to that douchebag John Mayer. After the singer told Playboy that she was “sexual napalm” and that he wanted to “snort her like crack,” Jess is concerned about guys checking her out 24/7. Monday on The View , Simpson said Mayer’s revealing Playboy interview was “embarrassing. I’ll walk into a restaurant and I feel like men are looking at me.” “I feel like they’re undressing me.” Yeah, John Mayer’s interview is when that all started. No one goes to a Jessica Simpson concert or watches her movies because of her charisma. Just sayin’. As she’s said before, the star said Mayer’s apology “doesn’t really matter.” Will she ever take him back? “He’ll never have this napalm again!” she declared. Amen, sister. Simpson also shot down her rumored romance with Billy Corgan . “I can’t meet anyone without being married the next week,” Simpson said of Corgan, who helped produce theme song for The Price of Beauty, which premieres tonight. “He is one of my dear friends … he understands my heart.” Deep . Also a clothing designer, Jess told The View panel about a new product: “I’m actually about to put out a denim line: sexy mom jeans !” Sure to be a hot seller . Check out a clip of Sexual Napalm on The View below … Jessica on The View

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Jessica Simpson Hates Guys Checking Her Out

Spencer Pratt Quits The Hills to Fight Cyber Threats

The Hills just isn’t the same without Lauren Conrad. Take away the entertainment of Spencer Pratt and it’s pretty much worthless … which we’d better get used to. The reality TV villain says he’s leaving the show, and we think he’s serious, to take his career in a surprising new direction: To protect America from cyber threats. Seriously. People reported this . “In the last few months I discovered a new passion and new purpose to my life,” Pratt said. “With this in mind, I have decided to take a break from MTV’s The Hills .” Now studying software engineering with a focus on encryption at USC, Spencer Pratt says he’s off to work for American Defense Enterprises’ cyber security division. His first mission? Making sure all Heidi Montag pictures are secure! Our first, and hopefully not last line of defense against hackers . “Upon learning of President Obama’s declaration that the ‘cyber threat is one of the most serious economic and national security challenges we face as a nation,’ I have decided to refocus my energy and devote my full resources to helping America,” he says. “My new mission is this: To do my part in maintaining the technological superiority of the U.S. military and prevent emerging technologies from threatening our nation’s security as we face this and other unprecedented challenges.” That’s … awesome actually. But this is Spencer Pratt . He can’t possibly be serious, right? Is there a reality TV crew on call to film him fighting cyber-terrorists? “I am saddened to take this break from MTV’s The Hills ,” he admits. “However I feel I would not be honoring my country if I were to continue when I have the opportunity and ability to assist our nation against these prevalent threats.” Pratt’s wife, Heidi Montag, remains on The Hills . Spencer has also been relieved of managerial duties for Heidi, who’s now using Malibu-based psychic Aiden Chase . These jerks have met their sleazy match .

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Spencer Pratt Quits The Hills to Fight Cyber Threats

Heidi Montag’s Manager Sees Dead People

Aiden Chase, the new manager of Heidi Montag after she fired Spencer Pratt, knows that not everybody’s on board with his profession – “healer and intuitive.” Whatever the hell that means. Chase says he helps people feel better about themselves and guide the future, which he can often see. He also says he has an ability to communicate with spirits. Including dead celebrities. Does that mean he can speak with Heidi Montag ‘s singing career then? Oh, we totally went there. Anyway, how did Aiden meet her? “One of my clients referred me to Spencer and Heidi,” he says. “Just after Heidi’s plastic surgery , doing healing work, energy clearing … helping put their future paths on the map. For about a month, Heidi has been asking me: ‘Be my manager.'” “When I really thought about it, really meditated, I realized I have been doing the job anyway. They had been consulting with me. It had been working for them.” Heidi Montag gets her advice from “healer” Aiden Chase. “I’m a healer and intuitive . What that means is I’m able to channel healing energy. How I like to describe that is love energy. How your mom wipes your brow and you feel better – she’s actually sending her healing energy to you.” “What we do with a healing is we set an intention and put that into effect by stating or saying: If you ask for it, it will come. I channel in the energy and it neutralizes what needs to be cleared, whether it be mind, body or spirit.” So basically, he charges an insane amount of money to blow smoke up people’s a$$es. Not a bad gig. Dude actually insists he can speak to the dead, too. Really. “Gene Kelly is one,” he says. “He represented himself to me.” “I kind of got a picture in my head of him. One of my iPods just switched to different songs, which is an interesting paranormal phenomenon, and on came a song from An American in Paris . I was like: ‘Oh. I listened and paid attention.'” “‘Hey, brother boy, this is Gene Kelly, I’m here to help you.'” She may have actually been better off with Spencer.

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Heidi Montag’s Manager Sees Dead People

Travis Barker, A-Trak Rock Hollywood Gig With Kid Cudi, Lil Jon

Duo played second-ever live show Wednesday night. By Kelly Marino Travis Barker and DJ A-Trak perform in Los Angeles on Wednesday Photo: MTV News/ Kelly Marino LOS ANGELES — On Wednesday night, Travis Barker and DJ A-Trak played their second-ever public show together — and although the set was quick, it did not disappoint, featuring guest spots from Lil Jon , Kid Cudi and Kid Sister . Travis Barker, DJ A-Trak Play Hollywood Performing in front of a sold-out crowd at Hollywood’s Roxy Theatre, the duo hit the ground running the minute they took to the stage. With a set that lasted a little under an hour, the duo treated fans to a medley of songs that included remixes by A-Trak (who also serves as Kanye West’s concert DJ), Barker’s own remixes and new material. Though there wasn’t any interaction with the fans, the crowd didn’t seem to mind. Instead they stood and watched in awe as Barker and A-Trak opened the show with Jay-Z’s “99 Problems” and continued to please the crowd with remixes of Nas’ “Made You Look,” Kanye’s “Stronger” and Snoop Dogg’s “I Wanna Rock.” And just as the energy was peaking, fans were treated to a guest appearance by Lil Jon, who took to the stage with his signature sunglasses halfway into the set, performing his song “Outta Your Mind.” But as just as quickly as he appeared on the stage he was gone, teasing fans and leaving them wanting more. As the night went on Travis Barker and A-Trak continued to perform an array of tunes, adding a little more of a rock feel to the show with Rage Against the Machine’s “Bulls on Parade,” Beastie Boys “Sabotage” and the Yeah Yeah Yeahs’ “Heads Will Roll.” Each song lasted for only a few short minutes before spilling into the next. The set then transitioned into more dance-oriented material, with songs like Prodigy’s “Smack My Bitch Up,” and Daft Punk’s “Robot Rock.” Not surprisingly, the set ended with a bang: opening act Kid Sister returned to the stage, with Barker playing drums and A Trak spinning behind her. Wearing ’80s-inspired attire, she pumped up the crowd with some booty-shaking moves while performing her hit “Pro Nails.” But when Kid Cudi took the stage, the crowd exploded. Performing “Pursuit of Happiness,” fans sang along at the top of their lungs while Cudi jumped around the entire stage, hi-five-ing fans lucky enough to be standing in front. The show ended just shy of midnight with DJ A Trak waving to the crowd thanking them and Travis Barker handing his drums sticks off to a screaming fan before walking off stage. As fans scattered to the exit doors, VIPs headed backstage — including Amber Rose sans Kanye West. Related Photos Travis Barker, DJ A-Trak Play Hollywood Related Artists Travis Barker Kid Sister Kid Cudi Lil Jon

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Travis Barker, A-Trak Rock Hollywood Gig With Kid Cudi, Lil Jon

‘American Idol’ Report Card: How Did The Girls Do?

Katie Stevens and Paige Miles appear to be headed home. By Eric Ditzian, with additional reporting by Gil Kaufman Crystal Bowersox on “American Idol” on Tuesday Photo: Frank Micelotta/ Getty Images The first grade in this week’s “American Idol” women’s report card goes to the producers for lopping 60 minutes off the show’s running time. A+ programming move, folks. The two-hour, filler-heavy live episodes we’ve seen in recent weeks will not be missed, even if the leaner, meaner show still managed to kick off with a painfully corny, too long bit involving the openly gay Ellen DeGeneres cuddling in the lap of the painfully heterosexual, recently engaged Simon Cowell as some sort of bid to convince us that the two talent adjudicators are BFFs. Now about those contestants . A few will not be missed either next week, based on their subpar performances on Tuesday night. Others, meanwhile, continued to impress and had us thinking this season is not nearly as dull as we once feared. Who surprised us, who disappointed us and who’s in danger of going home? Let’s take a look at the top 12 women’s report card. (And don’t miss Jim Cantiello’s recap of their performances in the MTV Newsroom .) Excellent Didi Benami : Picking up the guitar for the first time since the Hollywood rounds, Benami wins the comeback-kid award for her acoustic folk take on Fleetwood Mac’s “Rhiannon.” Her confident strumming and doleful camera stares made the judges fall in love with her again, with Cowell declaring that she’d had her first “wow” moment of the season. Crystal Bowersox : After last week’s health scare, this season’s one to beat did it again, effortlessly killing it with a bluesy shuffle through Tracy Chapman’s “Give Me One Reason.” Though not as revelatory as last week’s Creedence Clearwater Revival cover , Bowersox’s confidence and chops inspired Cowell to absolutely guarantee she’d be in the top 12 next week. Good Lilly Scott : Performing in the prime final spot, Scott strummed an electric mandolin for Patsy Cline’s classic “I Fall to Pieces.” Kara loved how she made a 50-year-old song sound contemporary, and Cowell praised her unique personality and oddball delivery but wasn’t sure it was enough to get her through to the next round. Scott won’t hoist the trophy in May, but we beg to differ with Cowell: She will live to sing again next week, at least. Siobhan Magnus : This season’s resident quirky girl paid homage to her dad with the Animals’ “House of the Rising Sun.” In place of last week’s soul-wail-heard-round-the-world, she kicked the retro tune off with a strong a cappella section and turned in a solid, if unexceptional, performance that should get her into the top 12 as well. DeGeneres said she was captivated and called the rendition spectacular. The glassblower’s apprentice may have kept it in check this week, but make no mistake: She can wail. Lacey Brown : She’d had very little success mixing it up with Fleetwood Mac and Sixpence None the Richer up until now, so Texas’ Brown decided to chuck it all and just do what comes naturally, crooning countryish ballads. From her rooster-like hair to the animal-print cardigan, it was all a bit Beauty School Dropout, but Brown did just enough with Brandi Carlile’s “The Story” to impress most of the panel, with Simon giving her props for knowing how to seduce the camera. She’ll keep on keepin’ on, but just giving good camera face won’t get her that far. Satisfactory Katelyn Epperly : She wanted to up the energy, but with a disco-lite stumble through Carole King’s “I Feel the Earth Move,” all Epperly did was likely make voters second-guess their opinions after two strong weeks. Kara went so far as to say she didn’t think Kate had her game face on and was just going through the motions, while just about all Randy Jackson and Simon could compliment was her gorgeous head of blonde curls. She’s probably safe for another week, but just barely. Unsatisfactory Katie Stevens : We’ve hammered her for many things in the past, but never before for being pitchy. A new week, a new critique. After repeated criticism for picking songs that made her sound older than a 17-year-old high-schooler, Stevens smartly went with Kelly Clarkson’s “Breakaway” … but it still didn’t measure up. Her Benjamin Button-like qualities just make her incapable of communicating any sense of youthful energy. Jackson said the song was too big for her voice, while Cowell called it gloomy, complaining that she too didn’t know what kind of artist she wants to be. You could see it in her eyes: She knows she’s going home. Voters will likely agree. Paige Miles : One of the most epic fails in “Idol” history. Miles, who despite scant screen time before the semi-finals has been tagged by the judges as having one of the best voices in the competition, butchered one of Michael Jackson’s favorite songs, “Smile,” turning it from inspiring to just plain sad and heavy in Ellen’s eyes. Cowell said it was like a Holiday Inn lounge-worthy effort and effectively signed her ticket home. Miles broke down and said she couldn’t keep her emotions in check during the performance, perhaps a precursor to Thursday night’s tears. What did you think of the women’s performances? Who killed it? Who blew it? Who is definitely making it to the top 12? Let us know by leaving your comments below. Related Videos ‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances

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‘American Idol’ Report Card: How Did The Girls Do?

The White Stripes’ ‘Under Great White Northern Lights’: Jack White Invades Canada, Because He Can!

Frontman’s workmanlike attitude is on full display in the rock doc, in Bigger Than the Sound. By James Montgomery The White Stripes Photo: Autumn DeWilde In any other lifetime, Jack White would have been a woodblock printer, a pirate, a missionary, a wheelwright, a buckskin-clad frontiersman, a statesman, a Union soldier, a sharecropping bluesman, a cigar-chomping newsman, an oil baron, an electrical engineer or one of the Wright Brothers. He would have worked very hard for a very long time with very little recognition, would have died for duty and country, would have bested foes with guile and determination, and he would have done all of it simply because that’s what you were supposed to. Instead, he’s trapped in this lousy century, where he’s forced to toil away as one of the most enigmatic, misunderstood musicians on the planet. He spends an exorbitant amount of time on an extraordinary number of projects, usually working within a preconceived set of conditions, for reasons that are usually only apparent to him. He suffers the slings and arrows of his critics not because he wants to, but because he has to. It’s just part of the job. After all, a wheelwright wouldn’t complain, would he? And all of this isn’t meant to serve as some pseudo-psychological profile on White. Rather, it’s about all I could think of after watching the White Stripes ‘ “Under Great White Northern Lights,” a documentary that is very much about doing things the hard way. Filmed in 2007, it follows the Stripes on their ultra-ambitious Canadian tour, on which they decided to play at least one show in every province and territory — 13 in all — mostly because, as White puts it, “Canada is the only country that’s ever turned us away.” This is no easy task: Canada is the world’s second-largest country ( thanks, Wikipedia! ), and getting to places like Yellowknife and Iqaluit is about as difficult as you’d imagine. And not content to simply play straightforward, standing-room-only shows in each city, White also decided that the Stripes would be playing “secret” shows during the day, in places like a bowling alley in Saskatoon, a pool hall in Halifax and aboard a boat in Charlottetown (that’s on Prince Edward Island, FYI). Along for the ride is the band’s shamanic road crew, who White maintains must always be dressed in matching black suits, red ties and bowler hats. And a film crew, that, based on a few glimpses of cameramen in the background of shots, was also required to adhere to the same dress code. In keeping with Stripes mythology, everything involved in the film also incorporates the band’s famous three-color palette (red, white and, the latest addition, black), which means red-and-white propeller planes, amplifiers, guitars, drums and outfits, even during travel days. And, in perhaps the most striking example, the film itself, which is presented almost exclusively — something like 98 percent — in those three colors. Backstage moments are appropriately black and white, onstage performances are a fiery red. You don’t notice it, but it’s there. Because it has to be. And what is most amazing is that White didn’t have to do any of this. Something inside him drives him to operate this way; makes him don a traditional tartan kilt for a ceremony in Halifax (and then wear it onstage that night), meet with Inuit elders in Iqaluit to get their blessing before a show or grind out songs on wholly inadequate — and, in some cases, downright antiquated — instruments. He sums it up best in one of the most compelling “Lights” scenes: an interview segment in which he attempts to explain himself and his ethos. “When I used to work as an upholsterer, it wasn’t always fun. … Sometimes, it was just work, and you do it because you’re supposed to. You force yourself to work,” he sighed. “I like to do things that make it really hard on myself. … I’m constantly fighting all these tiny little things, because all of those little things create tension.” And that tension gives birth to great things. Witness the Stripes’ entire discography, a workmanlike collection of songs built around two people and something like three instruments (occasionally, there’s a piano). Or their rise to fame, which was anything but meteoric, built over the course of a decade’s worth of blisters and bruises. Or this film, which most certainly ranks as one of the best rock docs in recent memory, if not of all time. The onstage moments are incendiary — standouts include a soulful and surging take on “Jolene” in Iqaluit and an undying version of “I’m Slowly Turning Into You” taken from their Yellowknife performance — and the backstage stuff is gripping, particularly the last scene, filmed after their 10th anniversary show in Nova Scotia. While I don’t want to give too much away, it manages to raise goose bumps, a masterful presentation of unspoken emotions and weighty subtext. But mostly, “Lights” serves as testament to the Charles Kane-ian will of Jack White himself (no wonder “Citizen Kane” is one of his favorites) and the greatness that determination can create in its wake. It’s a love letter to his unwavering dedication to doing things the hard way and his uncompromising, Old World work ethic. In fact, the only time he complains about anything during the entire film is when he learns he’s scheduled to do an interview with The Associated Press, and even then, he still ends up doing it. Because he has to. It’s pathological. Psychological. But it is very much him. After all, a wheelwright wouldn’t complain, would he? Questions? Concerns? Hit me up at BTTS@MTVStaff.com .

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The White Stripes’ ‘Under Great White Northern Lights’: Jack White Invades Canada, Because He Can!