Tag Archives: songs

The Damned Things Hope To Squeeze Some Work Into Upcoming Tour

Supergroup’s debut, Ironiclast, just hit stores, but they’re already considering a concept album about ‘free J

The 10 Most Annoying Christmas Songs [Video]

Christmas carols can be beautiful reminders of one of the most exciting times of the year. They can also be horrible scourges that make you want to poke sharp objects in your ears. Here are some of the worst offenders. More

Ryan Reynolds And Scarlett Johansson Split

‘We’ve decided to end our marriage,’ Reynolds confirms to MTV News. By Jocelyn Vena Ryan Reynolds and Scarlett Johansson Photo: Kevin Mazur Ryan Reynolds and Scarlett Johansson are separating, MTV News has confirmed. TMZ first reported that the couple had split up and that things are “amicable” between them. As of now, neither has filed for divorce, according to the website, but they are living separately. “After long and careful consideration on both our parts, we’ve decided to end our marriage,” Reynolds said in a statement to MTV News. “We entered our relationship with love and it’s with love and kindness we leave it. While privacy isn’t expected, it’s certainly appreciated.” Us Weekly reports that the split happened about two weeks ago and notes that “the big problem with their relationship is the distance,” a source said, adding, “They spent a lot of time apart when they are working. … She’s been unhappy for a while.” The pair married in 2008 in Canada after being engaged earlier that year, and while they remained relatively private, they have spoken about their love for each other. In the May issue of InStyle, Johansson opened up about being married to the “Green Lantern” star, saying, “I mean, you’re married, and suddenly you have your own family. There’s a nice comfort in that. That part of your life is certain, in a way. You’ve got your home in that other person.” At the Tony Awards in June, when she took the stage to accept her award, she gave a nod to her husband, thanking “the Canadian I live with.” Reynolds told GQ that the actress was “the best part” of his life and even joked about his People Sexiest Man Alive nod, explaining that Johansson would have a different way to ask him to do chores around the house. “Now it’s going to be, ‘Sexiest Man, take out the garbage,’ ” he laughed. “That does sound better.” Related Photos The Way They Were: Ryan Reynolds And Scarlett Johansson

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Michael Jackson Producers Defend Posthumous Michael Album

‘Michael mentored me so much to where I kind of knew how to complete his sentences,’ Theron ‘Neff-U’ Feemster tells MTV News of picking up where MJ left off. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Steven Roberts Michael Jackson’s Michael Photo: Epic Records Michael Jackson ‘s first posthumous album, Michael, has been met with mixed emotions by fans of the King of Pop. Black Eyed Peas frontman will.i.am lashed out at MJ’s estate for commissioning the album, while Akon, a contributor on the project, hailed the effort. Some of the songwriters and producers behind Michael are simply asking people to give it a chance before making a decision. “They’re gonna love the music, because it speaks for itself,” Eddie Cascio, who is credited as a songwriter on “Breaking News,” told MTV News. “Michael sounds great. The songs are great. The production sounds great. Teddy Riley did a phenomenal job finishing off the songs. The quality and production are incredible.” Theron “Neff-U” Feemster agreed. The producer had a hand in three of the album’s 10 tracks, including “Hollywood Tonight” and standouts “(I Like) The Way You Love Me” and “Best of Joy.” Feemster worked with Jackson in the past, as did the majority of the contributors to Michael, which he thinks made the project uniquely authentic despite MJ having little say in the way his tracks were completed. “It wasn’t difficult,” Feemster told MTV News of picking up the rough material. “It was like coloring. It was coloring a frame that was already structured. Michael mentored me so much to where I kind of knew how to complete his sentences. I understood the expectations that he wanted. He wanted to be beyond great. He wanted to give the world a gift, something they’d never heard or seen before. So even after his passing, it was great to have a great team of people to work with who also had experience working with Michael. It made it that much easier. Bringing very creative people together and people who understood his integrity and what he wanted as well, it was great.” What do you think of Michael ? Share your reviews in the comments. Related Photos Michael Jackson’s ‘Michael’ Cover Decoded Related Artists Michael Jackson

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Michael Jackson Producers Defend Posthumous Michael Album

Michael Jackson Producers Defend Posthumous Michael Album

‘Michael mentored me so much to where I kind of knew how to complete his sentences,’ Theron ‘Neff-U’ Feemster tells MTV News of picking up where MJ left off. By Jayson Rodriguez, with reporting by Steven Roberts Michael Jackson’s Michael Photo: Epic Records Michael Jackson ‘s first posthumous album, Michael, has been met with mixed emotions by fans of the King of Pop. Black Eyed Peas frontman will.i.am lashed out at MJ’s estate for commissioning the album, while Akon, a contributor on the project, hailed the effort. Some of the songwriters and producers behind Michael are simply asking people to give it a chance before making a decision. “They’re gonna love the music, because it speaks for itself,” Eddie Cascio, who is credited as a songwriter on “Breaking News,” told MTV News. “Michael sounds great. The songs are great. The production sounds great. Teddy Riley did a phenomenal job finishing off the songs. The quality and production are incredible.” Theron “Neff-U” Feemster agreed. The producer had a hand in three of the album’s 10 tracks, including “Hollywood Tonight” and standouts “(I Like) The Way You Love Me” and “Best of Joy.” Feemster worked with Jackson in the past, as did the majority of the contributors to Michael, which he thinks made the project uniquely authentic despite MJ having little say in the way his tracks were completed. “It wasn’t difficult,” Feemster told MTV News of picking up the rough material. “It was like coloring. It was coloring a frame that was already structured. Michael mentored me so much to where I kind of knew how to complete his sentences. I understood the expectations that he wanted. He wanted to be beyond great. He wanted to give the world a gift, something they’d never heard or seen before. So even after his passing, it was great to have a great team of people to work with who also had experience working with Michael. It made it that much easier. Bringing very creative people together and people who understood his integrity and what he wanted as well, it was great.” What do you think of Michael ? Share your reviews in the comments. Related Photos Michael Jackson’s ‘Michael’ Cover Decoded Related Artists Michael Jackson

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Michael Jackson Producers Defend Posthumous Michael Album

Mark Hoppus Calls New Blink-182 Album ‘Expansive’

Bassist says upcoming project reflects the band’s past and even gets a bit dark. By James Montgomery, with reporting by Jim Cantiello It’s already been described as “ambitious” and “weird,” and now Mark Hoppus is tossing another adjective onto the ever-growing pile of descriptives used for Blink-182’s upcoming album : “expansive.” That’s what he told MTV News backstage at Z100’s Jingle Ball in New York, but he didn’t stop there. Hoppus also hinted that the band’s forthcoming disc will also be an all-encompassing affair, one that not only harkens back to Blink’s past, but also touches on the dark days they’ve had in the present, including the deaths of longtime producer Jerry Finn and friends Chris Baker and DJ AM . “We’ve gone through a lot of really heavy stuff over the past few years. … There’s plenty of heavy stuff to write about,” Hoppus said. “I think in moments it will [be dark]. We’re still just barely getting into the whole writing process. We have about three or four songs done. I wouldn’t say it’s going to be a dark record; I think it’s really an expansive record. There’s stuff that sounds like what we were doing on the last Blink record, and there’s stuff that sounds like what we were doing 10 years ago and stuff that we’ve never done before.” Of course, whether all that equates to a “mature” album is a matter of debate, one Hoppus wants no part of. Because after a lengthy hiatus and several dark days, he and his Blink mates are now focusing on the future — and it looks bright indeed. “There’s going to be a new record, tours, the whole deal,” he said. “We’re in the studio pounding it out right now, and it’s going really good. It’s been so great to be back in the studio with Tom and Travis creating a new album. We can’t wait to get it out there.” What are you expecting from a new Blink album? Let us know in the comments! Related Photos Blink-182: A Career Retrospective Related Artists blink-182

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Mark Hoppus Calls New Blink-182 Album ‘Expansive’

Michael Jackson Fans Celebrate Michael’s Release With DJ Cassidy

‘It was always my dream to DJ for Michael Jackson,’ Cassidy says at album-release party Monday night. By Steven Roberts Michael Jackson’s Michael Photo: Epic Records NEW YORK — Many a Michael Jackson fan lined up outside of the Roseland Ballroom on Monday night to celebrate the release of the King of Pop’s posthumous Michael album . Dozens of dancers and fans filled the ballroom’s floor, decked out in costumes inspired by MJ’s iconic looks from throughout his esteem career. One of those fans also happened to be the evening’s master of ceremonies, DJ Cassidy. “I’m here to make the fans dance,” he told MTV News. “I think that’s why Michael essentially made the music. He wanted to make people dance. He wanted to make people feel the emotion he felt, and I’m here to do just that. I’m here to help the fans in the celebration of the king.” Dressed in a leather suit with a pink shirt and socks, a red bowtie and shell-top Adidas, Cassidy said that he’s been a fan of Jackson for as long as he can remember. The late singer has been his inspiration in anything artistic in his life, from music to fashion. “So much of my fashion comes from Michael,” Cassidy explained. “So much of how I play music comes from how he formed his songs, how he created his sound that really inspired the way that I DJ. And really, it inspired me to want to be a DJ, to want to make people dance. “So, when I became a DJ at the age of 10, it was always my dream to DJ for Michael Jackson,” he added. “Tonight’s just a small way for me to really celebrate his music.” The party’s guests also included producers Teddy Riley, Eddie Cascio and Neff U, who each had a hand in producing Michael ‘s tracks. But before he began to spin for the night, Cassidy was thinking back to the classics, particularly his favorite party song, 1979’s “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough.” “You can be anywhere in the world, any city, any small town, any type of crowd, black, white, old, young, poor, rich, at any type of venue,” he said. “They could be wanting to hear house music, hip-hop music, anything in between, but ‘Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough’ will turn that party out.” What’s your favorite Michael Jackson song? Share it in the comments. Related Photos Michael Jackson: A Life In Photos Related Artists Michael Jackson

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Michael Jackson Fans Celebrate Michael’s Release With DJ Cassidy

Michael Jackson Fans Celebrate Michael’s Release With DJ Cassidy

‘It was always my dream to DJ for Michael Jackson,’ Cassidy says at album-release party Monday night. By Steven Roberts Michael Jackson’s Michael Photo: Epic Records NEW YORK — Many a Michael Jackson fan lined up outside of the Roseland Ballroom on Monday night to celebrate the release of the King of Pop’s posthumous Michael album . Dozens of dancers and fans filled the ballroom’s floor, decked out in costumes inspired by MJ’s iconic looks from throughout his esteem career. One of those fans also happened to be the evening’s master of ceremonies, DJ Cassidy. “I’m here to make the fans dance,” he told MTV News. “I think that’s why Michael essentially made the music. He wanted to make people dance. He wanted to make people feel the emotion he felt, and I’m here to do just that. I’m here to help the fans in the celebration of the king.” Dressed in a leather suit with a pink shirt and socks, a red bowtie and shell-top Adidas, Cassidy said that he’s been a fan of Jackson for as long as he can remember. The late singer has been his inspiration in anything artistic in his life, from music to fashion. “So much of my fashion comes from Michael,” Cassidy explained. “So much of how I play music comes from how he formed his songs, how he created his sound that really inspired the way that I DJ. And really, it inspired me to want to be a DJ, to want to make people dance. “So, when I became a DJ at the age of 10, it was always my dream to DJ for Michael Jackson,” he added. “Tonight’s just a small way for me to really celebrate his music.” The party’s guests also included producers Teddy Riley, Eddie Cascio and Neff U, who each had a hand in producing Michael ‘s tracks. But before he began to spin for the night, Cassidy was thinking back to the classics, particularly his favorite party song, 1979’s “Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough.” “You can be anywhere in the world, any city, any small town, any type of crowd, black, white, old, young, poor, rich, at any type of venue,” he said. “They could be wanting to hear house music, hip-hop music, anything in between, but ‘Don’t Stop ‘Til You Get Enough’ will turn that party out.” What’s your favorite Michael Jackson song? Share it in the comments. Related Photos Michael Jackson: A Life In Photos Related Artists Michael Jackson

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Michael Jackson Fans Celebrate Michael’s Release With DJ Cassidy

Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo Reflects On Memories Tour, Plans More Shows In 2011

‘To see 5,500 people singing along to every last word through every song was incredibly validating,’ he says of Pinkerton performances. By Matt Elias Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo Photo: Tim Mosenfelder/Getty Images With Weezer set to hit Boston on Tuesday night (December 14) for the next stop on the band’s Memories Tour, playing The Blue Album one night and Pinkerton the next, frontman Rivers Cuomo chatted with MTV News about revving up the Weezer time machine. For Cuomo, the shows are an “emotional, cathartic experience,” especially during the Pinkerton set. “The last time we played all of those songs, they went over like a lead balloon,” Cuomo said. “And I just remember that feeling of just total rejection. And then to see 5,500 people singing along to every last word through every song on the album, even the really difficult ones, was incredibly validating for me.” Just 10 years ago, Cuomo didn’t want to play any Pinkerton songs; it was just too painful. But he’s since embraced the songs, thanks to the legion of vocal Weezer fans who pleaded for them over the years. “Now we get to give them the whole thing, and it’s a real joy for us,” Cuomo beamed. It’s fitting that his favorite song to play on this tour comes from Pinkerton, a song called “Across the Sea.” Cuomo described it as “the most personal and intimate and the most ‘me’ of anything I’ve ever written.” So when he saw the audience respond to it so well on their first night of the tour, it was a huge moment for him. They might not have seen it under his T-shirt, but Cuomo said he had goose bumps all over during the performance. And while Cuomo clued us into the Blue/Pinkerton tour idea on the set of Weezer’s “Memories” video back in August, the thought started way before then and way smaller. “I started thinking about doing just one show to commemorate the reissue of Pinkerton,” Cuomo said. “The album was just reissued last month, and I think it was probably like in February of this year that I started thinking, ‘Oh, you know, when we reissue the album, we should probably do a show in L.A. to commemorate the reissue.’ And that turned into, ‘Well, why don’t we do The Blue Album too?’ And ‘Why don’t we take it around the country and do as many markets as we can?’ ” Even though the Memories Tour was only slated for a handful of cities (L.A., San Francisco, Boston, New York and Chicago), Weezer’s 2011 plans should keep the nostalgia ride going much further. “I’m sure Weezer will just keep touring, and I have a feeling that some of those shows will be these Memories shows, Blue and Pinkerton, and some of the shows will be more like greatest hits, depending on the show,” Cuomo said. Are you happy to hear that Weezer will keep bringing out their early hits on tour? Let us know in the comments!

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Weezer’s Rivers Cuomo Reflects On Memories Tour, Plans More Shows In 2011

Rick Ross, Wiz Khalifa And More Make Our Top Mixtapes Of 2010

Waka Flocka Flame, Lloyd Banks, Wale and Fabolous also made game-changing street CDs, in Mixtape Daily ‘s year-end awards. Jadakiss, Wiz Khalifa and Fabolous Photo: Shareif Ziyadat/ Sean Berry/ Jason Campbell From the looks of things over the past 12 months, the mixtape game has never been healthier. In 2010, the standout projects and the MCs who helmed them took a page out of Drake’s book from the previous year with So Far Gone, making mixtapes that were put together like albums with a majority of head-nodding original material populating the track lists. Look no further than Rick Ross’ Albert Anastasia EP, which featured “B.M.F. (Blowin’ Money Fast)”; the song later landed on his proper LP and recently scored the #4 ranking in MTV News’ Top 25 Songs of 2010 list powered by its appeal on the mixtape circuit. Then there were upstarts like Big K.R.I.T., who delivered a stirring collection that was worthy of a debut album with his K.R.I.T. Wuz Here. The 19-song, self-produced set drew critical praise and eventually earned the Mississippi rhymer a deal with Def Jam Records. As the music industry undergoes more changes and technology erases the line between the labels and the fans, look for more artists to innovate and take their projects (be they official or unofficial) straight to the interwebs (word to Lyor Cohen!). The results could be promising: Fabolous’ The Funeral Service: There Is No Competition 2 was so ill and embraced by the streets that Def Jam turned the mixtape into an EP. Here, Mixtape Daily delivers the Top 10 (plus one) Mixtapes of 2010: Lloyd Banks’ V5 Street Testimony : “Just reflecting back in the studio,” Banks revealed to Mixtape Daily about the inspiration behind his resurgence. “Just going back. People always say, ‘Go back to your first album.’ I went back further than that. All the success came from [my early mixtapes] Money in the Bank, Money in the Bank Part 2 all the way to Part 4. I was like, ‘You know what? I did that in a matter of two years.’ I said, ‘I’mma do what I did in two years in one.’ … By the time I got to V5, it was a good five or six months between tapes. I didn’t plan it like that. I just never stopped recording and touring. By the time V5 came, I felt a little pressure. I told them it was gonna get better every time. I think people embraced it.” Big K.R.I.T.’s K.R.I.T. Wuz Here Street Testimony : “People can see the growth from when I first did my first project until now,” K.R.I.T. told Mixtape Daily when we named him a Fire Starter in June. “And they can see the growth and me really finding myself as an artist. And really not compromising my creative mind frame for what’s going on in the industry and just being myself and putting the music out. The first record is ‘Return of 4eva.’ It was really just telling the game we here on some Southern hip-hop and this is us. And this is the type of music that I’m gonna put out. And I just hope that people can relate to it and respect it.” Cam’ron and Vado’s Boss of All Bosses 2.5 Street Testimony : “At first, it was like the lost tapes. Tracks that were throwaways. Then we added more flavor to it,” Vado told us about the set. “What happened with the 2.5, ” Cam added, “we gave Drama maybe 25 songs [for Boss of All Bosses 2 ]. He was like, ‘You might as well come back with 2.5 in two weeks.’ But we were doing so much new music, we might as well call it 4.8. It’s crazy. It’s about 20 songs.” Fabolous’ The Funeral Service: There Is No Competition 2 Street Testimony : “It’s really incredible how people will connect with the work,” Fab said to us during our Midseason Salute . “I think we put a lot of work into it, with the whole funeral theme. We didn’t just say it and you had to daydream it. We went into the funeral homes. We picked caskets out for the competition. Def Jam, this summer, is gonna put the mixtape out as an EP. So I did about four new songs, put ’em with some of the original joints from the mixtape. We got more viral videos coming. We just gonna keep it going and let it end as the classic it is. A lot of people saying it’s a classic, one of the, if not the best mixtape of 2010. It’s crazy to me, because it started out as something I wanted to give free to the fans and people who accept my work. Def Jam even came in and said, ‘Whoa, we gotta get a piece.’ It’s a good thing, man.” J. Cole’s Friday Night Lights Street Testimony : “I just tried to make the best project I could make,” Cole told us over the phone days after he dropped FNL. “Pick the best songs, and some of those songs were songs I really had to bite the bullet and sacrifice and not put them on my album, ’cause I knew it would make the tape better. I had to figure out what songs I was willing to let go of and then make the best story, in terms of sequencing. It reminded me of when we were putting together The Warm Up. I’m just in a different place now. It was just time for new music.” Jadakiss’ The Champ Is Here 3 Street Testimony : “The regular formula for the first two was drop the mixtape right when I finished the album,” Jada told us when he previewed the project exclusively for Mixtape Daily. “I just shifted it on you this time: Give you the mixtape then go finish the album. Let you compare it with the albums that’s coming out while I’m in the kitchen. It’ll just be creating pandemonium everywhere instead of competing with my own album. It might be better to do it this way. We gonna keep switching it around. We might do another one this way, but we gonna switch the pattern up so they can’t follow.” L.E.P. Bogus Boys’ Don’t Feed Da Killaz, Vol. 3 Street Testimony : “I penned the term ‘quality street music’ like five years ago, and it’s good to see it’s still alive,” tape host DJ Drama told Mixtape Daily in October. “And normally, I tell you guys don’t be afraid, don’t be scared but, um, since we coming out on [Halloween], I think you should be scared.” Rick Ross’ The Albert Anastasia EP Street Testimony : “It’s more than just an extended play,” Ross explained to Mixtape Daily. “Because when I started recording and it was sounding too good, I wanted to put more songs in there than what I wanted to initially. But it’s The Albert Anastasia EP. I named it that because Albert Anastasia was a self-made man. He was a boss. He was a lot less celebrated. He was more focused on getting his job done, handling his business. Of course, he ultimately came to an untimely demise. But I feel when it’s time to go, it’s always untimely, so what’s the difference?” Waka Flocka Flame’s LeBron Flocka James 2 Street Testimony : “I’m not going lyrical, hard in the studio,” Waka said about his rowdy rhymes . “It ain’t time for me to do that. This ain’t no album; this is my mixtapes. Why I gotta go spend 30 hours [writing rhymes] off of a mixtape? Then I got other people dissing me for saying that. You crazy. You giving me that much time out of 24 hours, you not doing your job. That’s my word to you.” Wale’s More About Nothing Street Testimony : “That’s why you hear that vigor and hunger in my voice while I’m rapping,” Wale told Mixtape Daily about this project. “I was trying to go super crazy in the booth to let them know that the hunger is still there. It’s to my label, the fans, to the doubters. I’m trying to prove myself. A lot of people try to reinvent themselves. I’m trying to define myself. It’s almost like it was a rough draft of my mission statement before, but this is the final draft. If y’all didn’t know who Wale was before, you know now. And the play on ‘nothing’ is that a lot of people are saying nothin’, but we’re saying somethin’ now.” Wiz Khalifa’s Kush & Orange Juice Street Testimony : “I named the mixtape Kush & Orange Juice because, in a nutshell, I tried to match up a name that goes perfect with the tape,” Wiz explained to us earlier this year. “It’s perfect for wake-and-bake, if that’s what you’re into. Anybody who knows me knows that’s what I specialize in. It came out Kush & Orange Juice. That’s the formula. Fruits and vegetables. The tape is heavily inspired by all different types of herbs and wonderful green things that make us grow.” Did we miss anything? Share your picks for the best mixtapes of 2010 in the comments! For other artists featured in Mixtape Daily, check out Mixtape Daily Headlines . Related Videos 2010 Mixtape Daily Year End Awards

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Rick Ross, Wiz Khalifa And More Make Our Top Mixtapes Of 2010