Tag Archives: performance

Cam’ron Ready To Make A ‘Classic’ Mixtape With DJ Holiday

‘I could do a mixtape in three hours,’ Cam tells the DJ, in Mixtape Daily. By Steven Roberts DJ Holiday Photo: Aphiliates The O.D.: A Mixtape Daily Exclusive Cam’ron has been a busy man lately. Besides reconciling with Jim Jones and announcing the possible reunion of the Diplomats, he made a surprise appearance at Converse’s Band of Ballers tournament as both “assistant coach” and basketball player, helping the Jones Family squad secure their second consecutive title. Cam’s also preparing for the third release in his and DJ Drama’s mixtape series, Boss of all Bosses 2.5. MTV News caught up with Cam over the weekend at the Atlanta tourney, where we also spoke to DJ Holiday, and it seems everybody wants a piece of KFC. “Me and Cam need to do something … a Holiday Season or something. I know you know the brand,” the DJ said, referring to his popular mixtape series. “I could do a mixtape in three hours,” Cam challenged. “Let’s stop talking and do it.” “I can block out about four hours, and we knock out a Holiday Season and make a classic,” Holiday said. “I know you make mixtapes with everybody, but when you do one with the kid, it’s a little different experience.” The “killa season”-meets-“holiday season” collaboration was a no-brainer, said Cam, ready to cement plans. But first, Holiday said, he had some other projects in the works, including the upcoming release of Waka Flocka Flame’s latest mixtape, tentatively titled Flockaveli, which he described as crazy fighting music. And with Gucci Mane’s release from jail a little more than a week away, Holiday said he and Gucc would be preparing a follow-up mixtape: Writing’s on the Wall 2: The Appeal. “I just dropped that [Gucci Mane mixtape] Burrprint HD. It’s in stores right now. We did 20,000 first week; #1 on iTunes. At the end of the day, we finnin’ to make a movie,” Holiday said. Gucci “gets home in probably about 10 days, so you already know we taking over, 10 days. Writing’s on the Wall 2: The Appeal coming soon. I’m trying to win, man.” Should Cam collaborate with DJ Holiday or stay focused on a possible Diplomats album? Let us know in the comments! For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines or follow the Mixtape Daily team on Twitter: @shaheemreid and @mongosladenyc .

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Cam’ron Ready To Make A ‘Classic’ Mixtape With DJ Holiday

Ke$ha On ‘Saturday Night Live’ Backlash: ‘I Don’t Care’

‘I had a fun time. I played laser beams,’ she says of her divisive performance. By James Montgomery Ke$ha on “Saturday Night Live” Photo: NBC EAST RUTHERFORD, New Jersey — Ke$ha’s recent performance on “Saturday Night Live” was divisive, to put it mildly. Some saw her two-song set — which featured laser beams, body paint, spoken-word interludes, dancing astronauts, fireworks and an American-flag cape — as an attempt at “artistic expression” gone awry, while others praised her efforts, calling the performance “spirited” and writing pieces in her “defen$e.” Either way, it didn’t really matter to Ke$ha. As she told MTV News on Saturday at the Bamboozle festival, she’s not listening to anything anyone has to say about her these days. “If you don’t like dancing astronauts, laser beams that play music, me talking about aliens, glow-in the dark things, vocoders and a hot chick, I don’t know what to tell you,” she laughed. “My new theory is … I don’t really listen or look at anything. But I have heard through the grapevine that some people thought it sucked and some people thought it was great. [I] don’t care. I had a fun time. I played laser beams.” She did, indeed. If anything, Ke$ha didn’t think the backlash from her “SNL” appearance had anything to do with, you know, her actual performances as it did with the fact that she refuses to be categorized. In an increasingly segmented industry, she proudly — almost defiantly — sticks out like a sore thumb. A sore thumb with laser beams, of course. “I don’t use Auto-Tune. I come from a country-music-writing family, a punk-rock loving brother who gave me his records, and in a society where everything is supposed to be perfect — down to what I wear, what I look like, my body, my voice, my outfits — I’m not perfect, and I embrace it,” she said. “And I think that’s what a lot of people are finding not being up to par to, like, the standard that other people have set, but I’m just being real. And I think what I’m doing is good.” What did you think of Ke$ha’s “SNL” performance? Let us know in the comments! Related Videos MTV News Extended Play: Ke$ha Related Artists Ke$ha

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Ke$ha On ‘Saturday Night Live’ Backlash: ‘I Don’t Care’

Patton Oswalt Attacks Nobody For Stealing Material

What does a guy do after the Broadway show he’s starring in gets canceled because of his performance and then he’s removed from a comedy pilot after the first table reading? Well, if he’s Patton Oswalt , he scours the Internet to find out if disingenuous no-talents are stealing his stand-up material! Oswalt took to MySpace — God love you, Patton, but really: MySpace ? — to out a pathetic joke stealer named Nick Madson, an Iowa comedian who did Oswalt’s routine at a club on Wednesday. Needless to say: Someone get Madson a helmet.

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Patton Oswalt Attacks Nobody For Stealing Material

Miley Cyrus Makes a Wish Come True for Fans, Gets Props from THG

Despite our differences over years with Miley Cyrus , we’re happy to give the singer credit when credit is due. Miley took the stage yesterday as a big part of Make-A-Wish Foundation’s “World Wish Day” at The Grove in Los Angeles, joining Mark Ballas and Jordan Pruitt and putting on a performance for those in attendance. In other Miley music news: she’ll release a new album on June 22 and premiere the video for “Can’t Be Tamed” on May 4. Word is, it will be quite raunchy and buzz-worthy . Below, we’ve posted a slew of Cyrus photos from this event, followed by her performance of “The Climb” at the concert. [Photos: Splash News] Taking The Climb

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Miley Cyrus Makes a Wish Come True for Fans, Gets Props from THG

Ricky Gervais Globe-Trotting Once More

Um, if at first you don’t succeed… Despite god-awful reviews for his performance as this year’s host, British funnyman Ricky Gervais is ready for a rerun at next year’s…

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Ricky Gervais Globe-Trotting Once More

‘American Idol’ Shania Twain Night Fits Michael Lynche, Siobhan Magnus

For the first time all year, the judges do not rave about Crystal Bowersox. By Gil Kaufman Michael Lynche on “American Idol” Tuesday Photo: Fox In a season filled with youthful mentors like Miley Cyrus, Usher, Adam Lambert and Alicia Keys, Tuesday night’s (April 27) “American Idol” brought back a country/pop superstar who hasn’t released a new album in eight years. But Shania Twain knows what she’s talking about, since she was a guest judge during the audition rounds and her soft-focus advice to the remaining six finalists helped a few — Michael Lynche, Aaron Kelly and Siobhan Magnus — get back in the thick of the competition, even as long-time front-runner Crystal Bowersox faced her first neutral notices of the finals. First up was barroom rocker Lee Dewyze, who Twain met during the Chicago auditions. He chose “You’re Still the One,” with Twain suggesting he hold off on the guitar at the top and come in more subtly with a piano. Dewyze took her advice, starting off quietly and then rising to sing the everlasting-love lyrics in his signature raspy voice. Admitting it’s one of his favorite songs of all time (really, Dawg?), Randy Jackson said it started out, yes, pitchy but praised Dewyze for finding a way to make it his own by mid-song. “You found your sweet spot,” he said, with Ellen DeGeneres agreeing and saying that Lee’s talent is finding himself in each song. Simon Cowell said Lee picked the absolutely perfect tune from Twain’s catalog but faulted what Kara DioGuardi labeled a smile as a “weird face.” Shania said she was moved by the way Michael Lynche sang “It Only Hurts When I’m Breathing,” reminding him that even though his singing seems effortless, he should remember to imbue it with feeling. Big Mike transformed the tune into a Maxwell-like R&B seduction play, giving the song a gospel flair and throwing in some ear-candy falsetto at the end that brought a tear to Twain’s eye. Ellen compared the emotion Lynche brought to the song to the late great Luther Vandross, and Jackson said Lynche has found his lane as a sensitive balladeer. “I thought the performance, however, was a little bit wet, as if you were in a musical acting out the words,” Cowell said to the rest of the panel’s confusion after agreeing with DeGeneres’ Vandross analogy. “It was a little bit girly for you.” How was construction worker Casey James going to rebound from criticism that he was a bit lazy last week? Encouraging him to let his confidence shine through, Twain was excited about James’ choice of “Don’t.” Sitting on a stool and playing simple rhythm guitar, James sang a straightforward version of the midtempo ballad, stripping away some of his calling-card bluesy grit in favor of a more emotional, mellow rock vibe. “Casey, artists do not hide: the good, the bad, the ugly. They show it all, and that’s what you did in that performance,” said a pumped-up DioGuardi. “And that’s what you did in that performance. You didn’t hide. You didn’t cover it up with guitar. You were vulnerable, you were raw.” Cowell and Jackson also said it was one of the best performances James has given on the show so far, praising him for finally finding his sweet spot. She can do blues and pop, but can season leader Crystal Bowersox do country? MamaSox, who got her guitar signed by Twain during the Chicago auditions, chose “No One Needs to Know,” and Shania said she needed to let the emotion shine through. Backed by simple percussion, lap steel guitar, standup bass and mandolin, Bowersox crooned the tune in a peppy, old-timey country cadence, imbuing it with her particular charm while smiling through lyrics she said she hoped would get her boyfriend to “man up” someday. “Shocker, we don’t like Crystal this week,” Cowell frowned. “It was limp,” he added, comparing it to being forced to listen to a hired band in a coffee shop. “I didn’t feel any conviction from you.” Randy was into the Nickel Creek vibe, even if, like Ellen, he didn’t love the performance. Though Kara said it’s kind of impossible for Crystal to not be good because of her honest nature, she, too, thought it was just OK. Aaron Kelly, 17, has been on the bubble for weeks, and Shania tried to put him at ease about singing “You’ve Got a Way,” telling him to not worry about hitting the notes and just sing the song the way he feels comfortable. Kelly, arguably the most country of the remaining singers, convincingly and confidently sang the expansive ballad, giving one of his most solid performances in weeks. “The amount of emotion and depth that you showed when you sang that song … the maturity you had to embrace those lyrics,” Ellen said. Kelly proved he gets the “Idol” game by explaining that he changed a line about making love because he was singing the tune to his mom, and Kara praised his conviction. “For the first time in weeks, it actually felt sincere, it felt believable,” Cowell said. The final spot belonged to Siobhan Magnus, who went with “Any Man of Mine.” Twain encouraged her to get into the character of a woman who knows what she wants. Though her vocals were typically uneven, Magnus worked the crowd while strutting across the stage in a short flowered skirt and white boots, unleashing a pair of her signature rebel yells to cap off an upbeat performance. Simon, no fan of country music, loved the song, even though he felt the screaming at the end was unnecessary, comparing it to the sounds of a woman in labor. “I loved it!” Randy raved simply, as Kara agreed, saying Magnus was back in the competition. Someone will be sent home on Wednesday night’s show, which will feature performances from Lady Antebellum, Rascal Flatts, Sons of Sylvia and Shakira. What did you think of Tuesday night’s performances? Who killed it? Who fell flat? Who should go home? Write in your comments below! Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions. Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances Related Artists Shania Twain

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‘American Idol’ Shania Twain Night Fits Michael Lynche, Siobhan Magnus

Crazed Justin Bieber Fans Cause Riot, Concert Cancellation, Must Chill the Eff Out

Dear Justin Bieber fans: We know this young star is very cute and has a pretty good voice. But he’s just a singer. Seriously, he hasn’t cured a single disease or come up with financial regulation that will help ease the ongoing economic crisis. It’s necessary to pass along this message because people are starting to get seriously injured as a result of the mass hysteria surrounding Bieber. Even worse: police are shutting down his concerts! Both these developments took place in Sydney, Australia over the weekend, as Justin was set to sing on stage for a morning TV show. But the performance was canceled after thousands of unruly fans created a security nightmare and at least 10 girls passed out. Fans camped out overnight for the event. By 3 a.m., almost 4,000 people had gathered. When they heard Bieber might be in the vicinity, they rushed the stage, broke down barriers and generally acted like brides at a wedding gown sale. Not even Tiger Woods acts this out of control inside a Las Vegas night club. As news of the cancelled gig spread, Justin Tweeted: “I love my fans… and I am just as disappointed as everyone else with the news from this morning. I want to sing for my fans,” adding in capital letters: “I WANT TO MAKE THIS CLEAR…I DONT CANCEL…I WOKE UP THIS MORNING TO THE POLICE CANCELING THE SHOW FOR SAFETY REASONS.” Bieber then wrote he was “beyond grateful…for such an amazing warm welcome.” We’re sure he is, but perhaps Justin should also send a message to his followers: Chill the eff out! I appreciate the support, but I have a bowl cut and I sing songs other people have written for me. That’s about it. Justin Bieber fans react to the news that their utter insanity caused a performance by their singing god to be canceled in Australia. [Photos: Splash News]

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Crazed Justin Bieber Fans Cause Riot, Concert Cancellation, Must Chill the Eff Out

Sandra Bullock to Razzies: You Can Have Your Trophy Back

Sandra Bullock doesn’t need any more drama in her life. The star, who was such a a good sport in winning a Golden Raspberry for her performance in All About Steve, is ready to ship…

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Sandra Bullock to Razzies: You Can Have Your Trophy Back

‘American Idol’ Experts Predict The Boot For Casey James Or Aaron Kelly

Despite shaky performances, Tim Urban and Michael Lynche should be safe. By Gil Kaufman Casey James Photo: Fox The theme on Tuesday night’s “American Idol” was inspirational songs, but with the exception of Crystal Bowersox’s tearful “People Get Ready,” many of the night’s performances were uninspired at best. While that might make picking who could be eliminated during Wednesday night’s (April 21) “Idol Gives Back” charity extravaganza harder, for MTV News’ “Idol” expert Jim Cantiello , the choice is clear. ” ‘Jealous Guy’ notwithstanding, Casey James’ performances have all been the same thing over and over again,” Cantiello said of the pony-tailed Texas guitar slinger, who has carved out a blues-rock niche on the show. “It was only a matter of time before America grew impatient with his lack of growth. Furthermore, it was a night that was supposed to inspire, and thanks to passionate performances from Lee Dewyze and especially Crystal Bowersox it definitely did uplift the spirit at times, but Casey left me stone-cold.” Cantiello said he didn’t have a visceral reaction to James’ cover of Fleetwood Mac’s “Don’t Stop” the way he did to equally shaky performances from Tim Urban and Aaron Kelly, who he also predicted would land in the bottom three alongside James. “It’s never a good thing to go first and deliver a forgettable sound-alike performance,” he said of James. “But what tipped me off to Casey’s impending departure? The crowd didn’t boo Kara, Randy or Ellen when they panned his performance. You could hear a pin drop. Casey had obviously put the entire studio audience to sleep.” The view was a bit cloudier for MJ Santilli, founder of the “Idol” fan site MJsBigBlog.com . She thought “Teflon” Tim Urban got ambitious with his cover of the Goo Goo Dolls’ “Better Days,” which got universal pans from the judge’s panel for failing to live up to his more solid performances over the past two weeks. “But I still think he’s amassed enough of a following to keep him safe this week,” she said, adding that she thinks Michael Lynche “is probably not long for this world, but he performed near the end of the lineup, and when Simon Cowell makes statements like ‘You’ll probably still be here next week,’ they usually come true.” And while she found James to be “safe and boring,” she thought his fan base was strong enough to keep him in it, so it was perennially on-the-bubble teen Aaron Kelly who she targeted as this week’s boot-ee. “[He’s] been on the cusp the past couple of weeks,” she noted of the sometimes awkward high schooler, who failed to deliver sufficient emotion on his take of R. Kelly’s “I Believe I Can Fly.” “Once again, he bit off more than he could chew last night. And even though he gave it a good try, it was a mediocre vocal and an awkward performance. I think he’ll be heading back to smalltown Pennsylvania very soon.” One things is for sure, MJ said: After coming close to seriously turning off “Idol” hardcores with news that she was on the verge of quitting the show, Bowersox’s bravura performance brought her all the way back into their good graces. “She came back with a fantastic performance, showed some vulnerability — finally — and even, wordlessly made amends with Seacrest,” said MJ. “Honestly, she’s going to be hard to beat at this point. And it’s not as if any one of the remaining seven comes close to her talent, confidence, and performance skills.” What do you think of our experts’ predictions? Do you agree? Disagree? Write your comments below. Related Videos ‘American Idol’ In 60 Seconds Related Photos ‘American Idol’ Season Nine Performances Crystal Bowersox’s ‘American Idol’ Experience

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‘American Idol’ Experts Predict The Boot For Casey James Or Aaron Kelly

Crystal Bowersox And Lee Dewyze Get Inspired On ‘American Idol’

Mentor Alicia Keys couldn’t prevent so-so performances from Siobhan Magnus, Casey James and the rest. By Gil Kaufman Lee Dewyze on “American Idol” Tuesday Photo: Fox The theme of Tuesday night’s (April 20) “American Idol” was songs of inspiration, and guest mentor Alicia Keys did her best to offer some positive encouragement to the top seven. The inspirational songs were a setup for Wednesday night’s star-filled “Idol Gives Back” special, and in the end, leading contender Crystal Bowersox brought down the house with a performance that instantly felt like one of the show’s all-time greats. The hour began with Casey James taking on Fleetwood Mac’s iconic “Don’t Stop.” Keys said he had to find a way to connect with it and make the crowd remember him and not the song, since the 1977 original was such a huge, well-known hit. Tossing his signature bluesy grit on the vocal, James slowed the pace down just enough to make it his own and ripped off a pair of mini electric-guitar solos for good measure. He even did a little vocal ad lib near the end — “you better be lookin’ ahead, not lookin’ back, yeah, yeah” — to give it that extra dose of James soul. For Randy Jackson, it was good but, once again, more of the same, and Ellen DeGeneres said it was time to be great, and he just wasn’t. “I don’t think anyone is going to be talking about that tomorrow,” she said. It was too jam-band for Kara DioGuardi, who said the solos made him seem generic, and Simon Cowell was blunt when he opined that Casey showed “zero emotion” and that there was nothing particularly inspiring about the lazy song choice. Simon & Garfunkel’s “The Boxer” was personal for Lee Dewyze, who said he remembered it from his childhood, when it inspired him to play guitar. Keys told him to recite the lyrics and remember what they mean while he sang. Dewyze played it as a dramatic acoustic ballad while backed by a string section, pumping up the emotion and turning the lyrics into an urgent plea. Ellen felt the arrangement showed Lee’s depth and talent, and DioGuardi said it was clear from his performance that he had a connection to the song, which for her made it his “moment” on the show so far. “That was sincere, that was emotional, that was inspiration,” Cowell said, noting that he never particularly cared for the original. “I thought it was absolutely brilliant.” What do you say to a guy like Tim Urban who has had such a hard time on the show, and who picked “Better Days” by the Goo Goo Dolls? Not much, actually, as Keys said Teflon T found a way to make it sound like it was his song already. Also backed by a string section, Urban wobbled through the first bit, strumming his acoustic guitar with his eyes closed, never quite finding the right notes after seemingly hitting his stride last week with Elvis’ “Can’t Help Falling in Love.” From a banana to soup, Ellen was back to her food metaphors, saying that Tuesday night she wasn’t hungry. “I’ve liked your soup, I have, but today I just didn’t like the soup,” she said. It was just OK karaoke for Randy, and Simon said the performance wasn’t quite believable and a letdown from last week. Aaron Kelly was 5 years old when R. Kelly released “I Believe I Can Fly,” and Keys said it was a big task, but if A.Kells could practically break down by song’s end, he might have a shot. Kelly was a bit too somber, and though he hit most of the notes and had a major diva run at the end, the intensity and emotion seemed to be missing. Jackson and DeGeneres praised his huge voice and said Kelly pulled it off, but Cowell wasn’t totally buying it. On the one hand, Simon said, he could judge it knowing Aaron and liking him, which made it seem quite good. “In the real world, if we’d have heard that on the radio, I would have turned it off within 10 seconds,” he said to a chorus of boos. “Because it wasn’t very good, but you kind of made it quite good.” Pulling off Mariah Carey and Whitney Houston’s “Prince of Egypt” song “When You Believe” was not going to be easy for Siobhan Magnus, but when Keys heard the big falsetto note Siobhan had planned near the end, she thought that could be the clincher. Magnus appeared to pull it off, putting some diva power into the song and hitting that high, clear note Keys loved so much at the end. “Technically, it may have been really well sung, but my problem is it’s not a musical, and it started to feel very dramatic,” DioGuardi said. Calling it the hardest song of the night, Jackson said it was just OK, but Ellen disagreed, dubbing it proof of why Magnus was still in the competition. Cowell felt the arrangement was too old-fashioned and messy, saying he was distracted by the cloth butterflies wrapped around her arm. Michael Lynche began putting together his list of 200 songs he’d play on “Idol” if he made it, and the one he picked Tuesday night was Nickelback’s “Hero.” He played the “Spider-Man” hit as a symphonic acoustic rave-up, giving the muscular rock song a tad more soul. Kara wasn’t feeling it and sensed Mike’s tone didn’t fit the song, rendering it unrecognizable, though Simon thought he sang it well, even if he came off as artificial and not as authentic as last week. The primo final spot belonged to front-runner Crystal Bowersox, who chose Curtis Mayfield’s legendary “People Get Ready” as a way of expressing how grateful she feels for her opportunity to shine on the show, just days after it was revealed that she almost quit “Idol.” Starting off a cappella under a blue and pink spotlight, Bowersox brought a hush to the room as her crisp, clear vocals cut through the silence. As the band kicked in, she took it to church and hit some soaring, bluesy gospel notes and gave a clinic on how to imbue a performance with passion, breaking down in uncontrollable tears at song’s end. “That was inspirational,” said Cowell, who appreciated the emotion after fearing that MamaSox had shut down a bit in recent weeks. “You sang it fantastically, and for me it was in a completely different class from everything we heard tonight.” Kara loved that Crystal took a risk and put the guitar down. “MamaSox, you know why they call you that?” she said. ” ‘Cause you just schooled all those contestants.” And Randy? He just gave her a standing ovation. The next contestant will go home at the end of Wednesday’s two-hour “Idol Gives Back” special, unless producers revert back to 2007’s inaugural year of the charity event and put off the elimination for a week. Check back here to find out what happens. What did you think of Tuesday night’s performances? Who killed it? Who blew it? Who do you think should go home? Write in your comments below! Get your “Idol” fix on MTV News’ “American Idol” page , where you’ll find all the latest news, interviews and opinions.

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Crystal Bowersox And Lee Dewyze Get Inspired On ‘American Idol’