Tag Archives: festival

Why Are So Many Old Folks Still So Cool?

The Big Picture Patrick Goldstein on the collision of entertainment, media and pop culture Los Angeles Times Today's showbiz puzzler: Why are so many old folks still so cool? August 12, 2010 | 12:33 pm Showbiz is supposed to be a young person's game, even though the shelf-life for every new Justin Bieber and Lady Gaga grows shorter and shorter every year. But if you look around, you start to notice that our favorite geezers aren't giving up center stage so easily. Jack Nicholson is 73 and still totally studly, judging from how many hipsters want to hang out with him courtside at Lakers games. And, of course, Betty White, who's 88, hosted “Saturday Night Live” a while back and got the show's best ratings of the year. I had my own personal oldster fest this week. On Tuesday, I caught an early screening of Clint Eastwood's upcoming film, “Hereafter,” and though it's too early for a mini-review, let's just say that Eastwood, who turned 80 this year, is still The Man when it comes to making movies, showing off a range and depth that puts him right up there with John Huston, Robert Altman and the other great old masters from past ages. Last night, I took my 12-year-old boy, who's learning to play boogie-woogie piano, to the Hollywood Bowl to see B.B. King and Buddy Guy, a pair of blues giants who are pretty much the last major living links to the golden era of the blues. B.B., who is 84, is finally showing his age, sitting down through his whole set and largely doing shtick with his band. But Guy, who is 74, is still as full of swagger and sex appeal as any rapper a third of his age, showing off the guitar pyrotechnics that made him an enormous influence on such guitarists as Jimi Hendrix, Eric Clapton, Jeff Beck, Stevie Ray Vaughan and Jonny Lang. It was Clapton who once said that “Buddy Guy was to me what Elvis was to others–he's without a doubt the best guitar player alive.” Guy was in rare form, playing his guitar with his teeth, behind his head and, in the middle of a steamy rendition of Albert King's “Drowning on Dry Land,” taking it out into the crowd, strutting his stuff through the first 50 rows of the Bowl. One thing about having played gigs for 50 years is that you really soak up every great trick in the book, so what stood out about Guy was his showmanship. As my kid put it: “He's a great guitar player, but what surprised me was that he's really funny.” Whenever Guy would sing some especially R-rated lyrics, he'd smile and say, “Hey, it wasn't me who wrote that!” He is so good that he even got away with doing a montage of tunes from his favorite guitar slingers, doing note-perfect imitations of Hendrix, Clapton and others. Unlike a lot of oldsters, Guy doesn't look down at his nose at hip-hop, simply reminding his audience that if they are offended by rap trash-talking, bluesmen were doing the same thing long before Too Short and Young Jeezy came along. (Guy's daughter is the rapper Shawnna, who worked a lot with Ludacris in the early 2000s.) Anyway, it was a kick seeing a 74-year-old dude still at the top of his game. So what makes Buddy and Jack and Clint so cool? I think they earn their street cred for doing something well for so long that we realize that their gifts come from the inside, not just from being in fashion or having a sexy body. The next time anyone in Hollywood wants Nicholson for one of those “Bucket List”-style crazy old coots comedies, they should give Buddy Guy a call. He's got great comic chops, tons of charisma and energy to burn. Seeing him effortlessly work the crowd last night was a heady reminder that age really is just a state of mind. I have to admit–people like Guy and Eastwood make growing old look awfully enticing. Photo: Buddy Guy performing at the Montreux Jazz Festival last month. Credit: Jean-Christophe Bott added by: EthicalVegan

Rick Ross vs. Jay-Z vs. Fabolous: Who’d You Rather?

Filed under: Jay-Z , Rick Ross , Fabolous , Who'd You Rather? Hip hop heavy hitters Rick Ross , 34, Jay-Z , 40, and Fabolous , 32, refused to smile while attending an after party for the 2010 World Basketball Festival . The question is… Read more

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Rick Ross vs. Jay-Z vs. Fabolous: Who’d You Rather?

Jay-Z Caps World Basketball Fest With Hit-Heavy Set

Roc Nation head also reaches into his back catalog for ‘Hovi Baby,’ ‘Can I Live’ and more. By Jayson Rodriguez Jay-Z (file) Photo: WireImage NEW YORK — At Nike’s World Basketball Festival, NBA All-Stars Kevin Durant, Derrick Rose, and Rajon Rondo kept fans entertained as they defeated the Lamar Odom-led white team in overtime, but it was Jay-Z who capped the event with the night’s best performance. The Brooklyn rapper was the special musical guest on the bill, and he was more automatic than Stephen Curry from the baseline corner. “I only got 20 minutes, so I can’t wait for you to warm up,” Hov said, sauntering from side to side onstage. Performing in front of a crowd that included LeBron James, Khlo

The Arcade Fire Go Big, Soundgarden Get Heavy: Sunday At Lollapalooza

Arcade Fire and Soundgarden go head-to-head with powerful Sunday night sets By James Montgomery and Kyle Anderson Soundgarden’s Chris Cornell performs at Lollapalooza on Sunday Photo: Rich Sancho/ MTV News CHICAGO — Over the past three days, there’s been no shortage of power from the big stages at Lollapalooza, though usually, it was coming from one side of Grant Park or the other. On Friday, it was Lady Gaga who provided the surge , and on Saturday, it was Green Day . But on Sunday (August 8), during the final night of Lolla 2010, we finally got dueling dynamos, as the Arcade Fire and the reunited Soundgarden squared off across the park with sets that packed a wallop, not just sonically, but physically, and emotionally, too. This wasn’t showmanship –neither band really brought out the big lights (or the even bigger explosions) like Gaga or Green Day did–this was old-fashioned, roll-up-your-sleeves, sweat-on-the-stage rock and roll, the kind that makes the genre so intoxicatingly compelling, and yet, is sadly, in shot supply these days. The Arcade Fire–who just celebrated the release of their The Suburbs album with a pair of sold-out shows at New York’s Madison Square Garden –took the stage in stately silhouette, while the orchestral strains of the title track swirled around them, and quickly proved that they had learned a thing or two from their recent gigs: namely, that their big, bawling new anthems sound best while played at very loud volume. “Ready To Start” rolled along theatrically, getting bigger and bigger with each passing bar. “Rococo” started ominous and hushed, then built with each repetition of the chorus, husband/wife team of Win Butler and Regine Chassagne letting their voices become progressively more entwined, while the crowd chanted along in unison. And “The Suburbs” was jaunty and strong-limbed, stretching and expanding with Butler seated behind a piano and Chassagne on a second drum kit for added oomph. They sprinkled their older stuff throughout, and it was just as life-affirming as it ever was, in particular “Neighborhood #2 (Laika),” which was even huge during the lilting verses, “No Cars Go,” which had the crowd chanting “Let’s Go!” while the band broke into an extended jam, and a swooning, smashing take on “Crown Of Love,” which crescendo-ed until it toppled over on itself, all melodramatic and overwrought, and left the tens of thousands in the audience waving their hands back and forth. But in a set where so much was so massive, there were a pair of moments that stood out as not only the hugest of the night, but probably of the entire weekend. And they came within minutes of one another. The first occurred towards the end of their 90-minute set, when the band let “Neighborhood 3 (Power Out)” come crashing directly into “Rebellion (Lies),” a wave of sound that got downright spiritual, at least judging by the amount of arms thrust skyward, and then tore through “Month of May” a fiery burner off the new album. At the conclusion, with feedback still drenching the air, fans pressed against the barrier could be seen bowing to the band. They deserved it. And then, for the encore, the (of course) did “Wake Up,” which has become their defacto anthem, and the band didn’t even have to provide the “Woah-Oh-Oh-Ohs!” (it was probably the only moment of the show where they weren’t working overtime). Instead, Butler instructed the crowd to sing so loudly that they could “hear it on the space station.” And they probably could. That’s the power of old-fashioned rock and roll, after all. And while all of this was happening at the north end of the park, Soundgarden were providing the power down on the south side, though they preferred to do so with brute force and maximum sludge. Playing only their third show in 12 years, the Seattle quartet rolled through a similar set to their Thursday night (August 5) show at the tiny Vic Theater just a few miles away in Chicago. But while that performance was compact and internal (matching the intimate nature of the venue), the Soundgarden that showed up to play the main stage at the close of the festival was the stadium-sized monster that most people remember from the “Black Hole Sun” days. By far the most low key band to headline their particular stage all weekend (especially considering Lady Gaga’s bombastic theatrics and Green Day’s penchant for crowd-friendly spectacle), Soundgarden did what they do best: Grind out vicious, sludgy anthems designed to hit the listener square in the gut. Just as they did a few nights prior, the band opened with the Badmotorfinger dirge “Searching With My Good Eye Closed,” which set the tone for a truly harrowing night of pounding, aggressive rock. While recognizable hits like “Black Hole Sun” and “Rusty Cage” got the biggest reactions, the crowd was appreciative of grinders like “4th of July” and “Let Me Drown,” which captured the same kind of energy the band kept in reserve back when they last headlined Lollapalooza (they played the main stage on the touring version in 1996). “This is the millionth time we’ve played Lollapalooza,” frontman Chris Cornell announced to the crowd. Really, it might as well have been ’96, as the group have not lost a step, nor have they forgotten their friends (former Pearl Jam and Red Hot Chili Peppers drummer Jack Irons showed up for the show-closing “Slaves and Bulldozers”). Soundgarden are about the closest thing Lollapalooza has to an institution, and though no songs played during their festival-closing set were written after ’96, there’s something to be said for tradition — really, really loud tradition. Soundgarden capped off a busy Sunday at Lollapalooza, which saw schizophrenic jumps from the over-the-top theatrics of X Japan to the grooviness of Erykah Badu to the stout riffage of Wolfmother to the gardening-friendly hip-hop vibe of Cypress Hill. An eclectic, sometimes wholly disjointed lineup, to be sure, but one that will live on in Lollapalooza history — and founder Perry Farrell wouldn’t have it any other way. Related Videos Lollapalooza 2010 Heats Up Chicago! Related Photos Lady Gaga, Soundgarden, Green Day Heat Up Lollapalooza 2010 Related Artists Soundgarden Arcade Fire

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The Arcade Fire Go Big, Soundgarden Get Heavy: Sunday At Lollapalooza

‘Love the Way You Lie’ Joins List Of Memorable Joseph Kahn Videos

Kahn has directed videos for Britney Spears, Eminem, and Lady Gaga. By James Dinh Rihanna on the set of the “Love the Way You Lie” music video Photo: Danny Mayer/ Eric Ford/ On Location Photos After much anticipation, the Joseph Kahn-directed video for Eminem and Rihanna’s chart-topping “Love the Way You Lie” debuted Thursday (August 4) on MTV. In the song, Em and Rihanna tell the intense story of a woman who stays with her male counterpart despite his violent habits. The video shows Megan Fox and Dominic Monaghan engaging in a relationship that’s similarly emotionally destructive. Kahn, who has worked with everyone from Janet Jackson to Rob Zombie, has a particular directing style that emphasizes CGI special effects and futuristic styling. Here are a few other highlights from his career. Britney Spears, “Toxic” In the 2004 clip for Spears’ flashy “Toxic,” the pop princess played an assassin on a quest to poison her cheating boyfriend. The clip employed eye-popping costumes for Spears — including a stewardess outfit and a glittery bodysuit — and quickly rose to the top of the pop princess’ videography. “The plot is pretty nonsensical. It’s just fun. [It’s like] James Bond flicks and sex,” Kahn told MTV News . Years later, the director would collaborate with Spears on the clip for “Womanizer” — in which he slyly referenced their earlier collaboration. U2, “Elevation” U2 went on a ride like no other when they joined forces with “Lara Croft: Tomb Raider” for the 2001 video promoting “Elevation.” A call from an “evil Bono” set the mood for the action-filled video, which features the band on a rescue mission with Angelina Jolie thanks to Kahn inserting members into scenes from the film. With the help of Ms. Croft, U2 dodges the dangers of the bad Bono, although eventually good and evil come face to face in a battle of stereo and vocal power. But the good guys win out, and the band walks into a calm street that has cars and elephants floating overhead. Eminem, “Without Me” For most of Eminem’s career, the rapper has played the funny guy in his music videos. His clip for the 2002 hit single “Without Me” went further than mere gags, asserting his ability to poke fun at the controversies surrounding his music. Throughout the video, Em parodies a comic-book hero on a mission to save a young boy from listening to a copy of The Eminem Show , which is labeled with a dreaded ‘Parental Advisory’ sticker. While on his quest, Em manages to sleep with porn stars, practice yoga and appear on “The Real World.” Enrique Iglesias, “Hero” Understandably, Enrique Iglesias’ music videos have showcased his good looks and suave persona. His 2001 clip featured Jennifer Love Hewitt as the singer’s love interest and other half of a modern-day Bonnie and Clyde. The two are on the lam from Mickey Rourke, woh heads a rival group of bandits. After some steamy scenes with Hewitt, the pop star is found by Rourke’s gang and apparenly killed by them. Lady Gaga, “LoveGame” If there’s one thing Lady Gaga reps for, it’s the busy streets of New York City. Before the days of her music videos doubling as mini-movies, Kahn helped the singer take a journey through the Big Apple’s underground in a video that recalls Michael Jackson’s also-subway-set “Bad.” Accompanied by her crew of dancers, the singer drops it low in a subway station and dances the night away. “I worked with Joseph Kahn, and he did an amazing job. He didn’t just capture the fashion; he captured the artist,” Gaga told MTV News . What’s your favorite Joseph Kahn-directed music video? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos Memorable Joseph Kahn Music Videos Related Artists Eminem Britney Spears Lady Gaga Rihanna

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‘Love the Way You Lie’ Joins List Of Memorable Joseph Kahn Videos

Soundgarden Kick Off Lollapalooza Weekend With Intimate Night Of Noise

Grunge rockers get Chicago hyped for the festival with a set at the Vic Theatre. By Kyle Anderson Soundgarden’s Chris Cornell performs in Chicago on Thursday Photo: Gary Miller/ FilmMagic CHICAGO — You could have easily convinced outsiders that they had wandered through a time warp and that the Chicago of 2010 was actually Seattle of 1992. The streets were filled with rock kids looking for a place to hang, tattoo parlors and coffee shops filled the storefronts, and there was even a shop called Never Mind around the corner from the Vic Theatre, which was playing host to Soundgarden on Thursday night. Back for only their second show since they decided to get the band back together after a 13-year hiatus, Soundgarden prepared for Sunday’s Lollapalooza-closing set with a surge through their back catalog, with enough bulldozer riffs and druggy interludes to make the rapt audience forget what day it was (let alone what year). With his long metal locks grown back to full length, Soundgarden frontman Chris Cornell strode easily onto the stage as though nothing had changed in the years since the band played “Searching With My Good Eye Closed,” which opened the two-hour set well balanced with deep cuts and mainstream hits. Though the show was not without hiccups (hot microphones seemed to dog them all night), Soundgarden proved that their catalog of tunes has withstood the test of time. Old favorites like “Let Me Drown” and “Get on the Snake” laid out Soundgarden’s whole aesthetic: thick, burly riffs, deep rhythmic thrusts and Cornell’s towering yelp of a voice. It’s no wonder that, when combined with a killer chorus, songs like “Black Hole Sun” and “Pretty Noose” — both of which showed up in Thursday night’s set — became such gigantic mainstream rock hits. But there are other parts of Soundgarden that have nothing to do with their radio-friendly side. Though usually thought of as the most “metal” of all the major grunge acts, Soundgarden kept as much punk-rock speed and clamor in their holster as anybody else from Seattle, and bits of that ethos kept creeping through (especially on the extra-adrenaline-packed “Rusty Cage”). There’s also no shortage of churning guitar sludge in the deeper album cuts of their catalog, and those were on display as well (best illustrated by the set-closing “Slaves and Bulldozers”). By the time the band returned for the encore (which saw drummer Matt Cameron tease a jazzy solo while Cornell got some assistance with his guitar), the time warp was complete, and the band sent the 1,400 or so hardcores home with a trifecta of “4th of July,” “Blow Up the Outside World” and “Like Suicide.” For a group gone 13 years and only having had one show back in the saddle, they sounded impressively polished, passionate and loud — the ideal act to close out one of the biggest music festivals in the country. Lollapalooza 2010 gets under way Friday — make sure to check out MTV News’ Lollapalooza Live , streaming Friday, Saturday and Sunday at 5 p.m., right here on MTV.com. And follow all of Lollapalooza on the MTV Newsroom blog . Related Photos Soundgarden Performs In Chicago Related Artists Soundgarden

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Soundgarden Kick Off Lollapalooza Weekend With Intimate Night Of Noise

Nicki Minaj Is A Top-Five Candidate For ‘Hottest Breakthrough MCs Of 2010’!

Winner will be revealed on MTV2’s “Sucker Free Summit” Sunday at noon. By Shaheem Reid Nicki Minaj Photo: Young Money/Cash Money It is here: As promised, the top-five vote-getters in our poll for “Hottest Breakthrough MC of 2010” will be revealed this week. These are the artists you guys voted for over the past month, and we can’t express enough how overwhelmed we were by your participation in this project. More than 200,000 votes came in, and they were tallied as of midnight Friday. Keep in mind, the unveiling of the names this week are the top five, but in no particular order. The winner of the “Hottest Breakthrough MC of 2010,” as voted on by the MTV News audience, will be revealed Sunday (July 25) at noon on the “Sucker Free Summit.” Chosen One: Nicki Minaj Rising in the Ranks : Nicki Minaj went from working at Red Lobster to being the red-hot current face of female hip-hop in less time than it takes to complete college. She’s as much an iconic figure for her standout fashion and beauty as she is for tearing up the mic alongside your favorite MCs. Her rabid following has bought into Minaj’s entire package. The hype is backed by true talent, and she’s unique and feisty. And while every photo you see in the press personifies her glamorous life as a Young Money superstar, Minaj is no different from every other MC who has ascended the heights of their genre. The native of New York’s Jamaica, Queens, neighborhood started at the bottom and had to grind her way to the top. First discovered by Lil Wayne on the street-DVD series On the Come Up, Nicki couldn’t get any love from DJs in her hometown, so she moved to Atlanta. It was there she recorded some verses for Weezy’s Gangsta Grillz: Dedication 3 mixtape — singing and rapping on songs such as “Still I Rise” with the rest of Wayne’s then-mostly unknown crop of new talent, including Drake . Nicki also aligned herself with Gucci Mane, adding heavily to her street credibility and profile. While her sexy image was our first impression of Nicki (who can forget that bathing-suit photo in which she paid homage to Lil’ Kim ?), Minaj really found her own lane during the spring of last year with the Beam Me Up Scotty mixtape, which she put together with Atlanta’s DJ Holiday. Nick showed us she has boundless personality on the mic, bringing forth her Barbie persona and all the charismatic outfits, rhyme flows and vocal inflections that go along with it. Records from the tape — “Kill the DJ,” “I Get Crazy” with Lil Wayne and “Itty Bitty Piggy” — bubbled on the streets for months, allowing Nicki to hit the club circuit with her own shows. In the summer of last year, Nick was spotlighted on the Young Money Presents: The America’s Most Wanted Music Festival , and by the fall, seemingly all the guys in music wanted to get with her. Minaj’s career went to the next level when she started turning in show-stealing cameos, which have carried well into this year. Diddy, Robin Thicke, Ludacris, Sean Garrett, Usher, Jadakiss, Trey Songz, Gucci Mane, Sean Kingston and, of course, her Young Money family all know that she’s developed into one of the most versatile performers in hip-hop — and she still hasn’t released her debut album , which is due late this year. Early Insight : “With [my debut] album, I think it’s more important that people get accustomed to seeing a female rapper again,” Nicki said. “People don’t even know what a female rapper does. We’re so not used to seeing it. We don’t get nominated. I need to work [the people] up to accepting a female rapper again and accepting my style and all of that — then the album will come.” Blistering Ballistics : ” Now all these bitches wanna try and be my bestie/ But I take a left and leave ’em hangin’ like a teste/ Trash talk to ’em, then I put ’em in a Hefty/ Runnin’ down the court/ I’m dunkin’ on ’em, Lisa Leslie/ It’s goin’ down, basement/ ‘Friday the 13th,’ guess who’s playin’ Jason?/ Tuck yourself in, you better hold on to ya teddy/ It’s ‘Nightmare on Elm Street,’ and guess who’s playin’ Freddy?” — from Ludacris’ “My Chick Bad” Forecast : Nicki, who is also a member of the Diddy-led all-star Dream Team, didn’t get an overwhelming response for her debut official single, “Massive Attack,” but the misstep did nothing to hurt her popularity. Her follow-up, “Your Love,” is already a #1 hit (with no video yet!). It was a leaked track that the fans loved so much, program directors on radio were forced to add it. Minaj is working on her yet-untitled first album with Young Money and Swizz Beatz. If she continues to attack her own tracks with the fervor she does on her guest appearances, the LP should be a hands-down winner. MTV News will be rolling out the top-five candidates for “Hottest Breakthrough MCs of 2010” all week — with the winner being revealed on MTV2’s “Sucker Free Summit” on Sunday at noon! Related Videos Top Five 2010 Hottest Breakthrough MCs Related Artists Nicki Minaj

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Nicki Minaj Is A Top-Five Candidate For ‘Hottest Breakthrough MCs Of 2010’!

Police probe attempted murders at ‘T in the Park’

The Independent reports on a incident which happened during the T in the Park festival which put two men in hospital with serious injuries and is now being investigated as a attempted murder by detectives. “Two 20-year-old men were found with serious abdominal injuries on a walkway between the main arena and the campsite at around 11.50pm last night. “I would urge anyone who witnessed these incidents take place, or anyone who may have photographs or footage of the incident, to get in touch with us.”-Independent The paper also reports on separate incidents at the festival which are appealing for witnesses like the assault of a women near the bus area on Saturday. “Last night, police had arrested 56 people over the course of the event, with the number of people detained 10% down on last year.”-Independent added by: Mcellie

The Social Network Will Open the New York Film Festival, New Full-Length Trailer Coming Soon

You know that new second teaser for The Social Network that you keep chasing around the internet like some game of Whack-a-Mole, trying to catch before Sony pulls it down? Well as the studio told Movieline, that teaser — which is awesome, for those who haven’t been lucky in tracking it down — is actually exclusive to the New York Film Festival. And hey, look at that: The Social Network is going to open the New York Film Festival on September 24 , a full week before it opens nationwide. Fear not, though: you’re about to get something new much sooner than that.

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The Social Network Will Open the New York Film Festival, New Full-Length Trailer Coming Soon

Swizz Beatz Says Musical Connection To Alicia Keys Is ‘On Another Level’

‘Anytime we in the studio, it’s just musical genius,’ the producer says of working with his fianc