Tag Archives: words

John Mayer Moves On From Playboy Interview At Detroit Show

Singer talks to the crowd a lot during two-hour concert, but makes no mention of his recent controversial comments. By Adam Graham John Mayer (file) Photo: Paul Bergen/Redferns AUBURN HILLS, Michigan — Those who feared John Mayer would zip his lip and let his guitar do the talking in the wake of Playboy -gate needn’t have worried. During Mayer’s Battle Studies Tour stop Friday night (February 12) at the Palace of Auburn Hills in suburban Detroit, the embattled singer talked — and talked and talked — from the stage, but not about Jessica “Sexual Napalm” Simpson, his affinity for pornography or the racist and homosexual slurs in the Playboy interview that landed him in hot water earlier this week. Instead, Mayer mused about VH1 Classic, the 1970s and Sylvester Stallone — namely “Over the Top,” 1987’s Stallone-starring arm-wrestling epic. “Me taking off my jacket, you understand, is sort of like Sylvester Stallone turning his hat around in ‘Over the Top,’ ” Mayer told the crowd of 12,000, after removing the black jacket he wore during the first couple of songs of Friday’s show. “You know, like Sylvester Stallone says in ‘Over the Top,’ one movie in a giant string of arm-wrestling movies. That’s when you know Hollywood was flush with cash. Somebody walked in and said, ‘I got an idea, you take Stallone … ‘ they’re like, ‘Sold. Wait, hold on, what’s he doing?’ ‘He’s arm wrestling.’ ‘Double sold. Let’s do it.’ ” The off-the-cuff riff felt like Mayer trying out new stand-up material, as he wondered aloud if anyone actually uttered the words “Over the Top” in the film. Basically, he seemed like he was back to his jokey, irreverent self, and he let his onstage apology in Nashville on Wednesday — and his tweeted apologies the same day — speak for themselves. Mayer, backed by his five-piece band and two backup singers, opened the two-hour concert with “Heartbreak Warfare,” his current single, and continued through a host of material from Battle Studies and his previous efforts. Covers of Peter Gabriel’s “Sledgehammer” and the Police’s “Message in a Bottle” were added into the mix, and a mid-show run-through of his very first single, “No Such Thing,” was performed acoustically: “How I used to play it at coffee shops,” he said. If so desired, plenty could be read into the video screens behind Mayer that projected a blazing wall of fire or lyrics such as “I’ll come through, like I do when the world keeps testing me, testing me, testing me” (from “Vultures”). But through his lighthearted stage banter and sincere thank-yous to the crowd for spending their Friday evening with him, he seemed doggedly determined to move forward from the controversy. Kara Dubay of Rochester Hills, Michigan, didn’t mind spending her Friday with Mayer and wasn’t concerned about his comments from the Playboy interview. “I don’t care what he does in his personal life, really,” the 19-year-old college student said. “I like him for his music, so I don’t think [his personal life] is anyone’s business.” David Trierweiler of Grand Rapids, Michigan, said he thought Mayer’s comments in the Playboy article were lost in translation. “I think he meant well, it just came across wrong,” said Trierweiler, 22. “By no means did he mean to say anything against anyone else.” Katelyn Van Slyke, a graduate student at the University of Michigan in Ann Arbor, agreed. “I think that everyone takes what he says way too seriously. Everything he says is like a joke with himself. He’s a funny guy.” She said Friday’s concert and the warm reception he received from the 80 percent capacity crowd proved he can move past the negativity caused by the racy interview. “He can move on from it. He’s a weird guy, and his personality goes into his music, that’s what makes him so unique,” she said. “He apologized, and I don’t think he’s a bad guy. He’s just taken way too seriously.” Related Artists John Mayer

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John Mayer Moves On From Playboy Interview At Detroit Show

Google Buzz: What’s Wrong, & How to Fix It

I finally enabled Google Buzz today and have spent the morning futzing around with it, sending out a few buzzes, uploading some stuff, customizing behaviors, and observing how people are interacting so far. My first impression? Buzz is fantastic in theory, but not yet ready for prime time.

John Mayer Denies Douchebag Status, Refers to Jessica Simpson as "Sexual Napalm"

In a new interview with Playboy , John Mayer makes sure to say that he’s NOT a douchebag. He then spends the entire interview proving why so many people consider him to be a giant douchebag. We’ll let Mayer dig his own douchey grave below, as he recounts what it was like to sleep with Jessica Simpson and why he and Jennifer Aniston broke up… On sex with Simpson : That girl is like crack cocaine to me. Sexually it was crazy… It was like sexual napalm. Did you ever say, ‘I want to quit my life and just f*ckin’ snort you? If you charged me $10,000 to f*ck you, I would start selling all my s*** just to keep f*cking you.'” On Aniston : That woman was the most communicative, sweetest, kindest person. On their break-up : There was a rumor that I’d been dumped because I was tweeting too much. That wasn’t it, but that was a big difference. The brunt of her success came before TMZ and Twitter… She saw my involvement in technology as courting distraction. THG note : In other words… that was it. On current sex life : I get less ass now than I did when I was in a local band. Because now I don’t like jumping through hoops. On NOT being a douchebag : From now on I’m just going to pretend that people really dig the s*** out of me. I’ve been trying to prove to people I’m not a douchebag by not dating, by keeping my name out of Us Weekly . That’s f*cked up, man. I’m not dating. I’m not even f*cking. So now I’m going to experiment with ‘f*ck you.’ John, your dating life has nothing to do with the public’s perception of you. What might make people think you’re a douchebag? Rambling, nonsensical interviews about masturbation and sexual napalm that make you sound like an attention-hungry tool. Or, to use a more apt description: a douchebag.

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John Mayer Denies Douchebag Status, Refers to Jessica Simpson as "Sexual Napalm"

Yeasayer Lead Us Through Odd Blood, Track By Track

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

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Yeasayer Lead Us Through Odd Blood, Track By Track

Kyle Boller and Carrie Prejean: Engaged!

Kyle Boller has been an ineffective starting quarterback in the NFL, with a career passer rating of 70.6 Carrie Prejean, meanwhile, has been an ineffective Christian role model, with a history of nude photos, sex tapes and bold-faced lies that have exploited the popular religion for personal fame and fortune. In other words: these two are perfect for each other! Prejean and Boller got engaged over the weekend, as the failed QB proposed to the dethroned beauty queen in her hometown of San Diego. This is great news for Carrie: Once the wedding takes place, she can finally have sex. Kyle Boller failed as a quarterback due to poor on-field decision making. Looks like he has the same problem away from the gridiron.

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Kyle Boller and Carrie Prejean: Engaged!

New Orleans Saints Vs. Indianapolis Colts: Super Hopes in the Game …

One Response to “ New Orleans Saints Vs. Indianapolis Colts : Super Hopes in the Game of XLIV”. 1. Ron Says: Ugh…I have a friend that refuses to watch the Super Bowl if (when) the Eagles don’t get there. In other words, he’s missed alot …

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New Orleans Saints Vs. Indianapolis Colts: Super Hopes in the Game …

Swizz Beatz Has Pharrell And Q-Tip To Thank For Justice Sample

The hip-hop heavyweights urged Swizzy to check out the French electronic duo, whom he sampled for Jay-Z’s ‘On to the Next One.’ By Steven Roberts Swizz Beatz Photo: Full Surface Even before Jay-Z’s Blueprint 3 dropped, fans had already gravitated to the Swizz Beatz-produced “On to the Next One.” The popular three-second sample loop on the hook leant itself to a head-nodding and sound-system-bumping experience. And ever since the video kicked off the new decade , the song’s hook has been on repeat on radio.

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Swizz Beatz Has Pharrell And Q-Tip To Thank For Justice Sample

Drake, Eminem ‘Talking About’ Another Collaboration

‘We might need that to happen,’ Drake says at Grammy Awards red carpet. By Shaheem Reid Photo: MTV News It looks like planned March release for Drake’s hotly anticipated official debut LP, Thank Me Later, may not happen. It’s already February and the 23-year old said he’s still recording his opus

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Drake, Eminem ‘Talking About’ Another Collaboration

Maddox Jolie-Pitt Has a Crush

It looks like Maddox Jolie-Pitt has something in common with… millions of other penis-based human beings. The eight-year old son of Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie has developed feelings for Kim Kardashian , as he attended last week’s New Orleans Saints game with his father and was more interested in shots of Kim on the big screen than he was in shots on Brett Favre by defensive ends

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Maddox Jolie-Pitt Has a Crush

Alleged Travolta Extortionist Maintains Innocence

Filed under: John Travolta , Exclusives Accused John Travolta extortionist Pleasant Bridgewater continues to proclaim her innocence — and now she’s doing it through the words of Martin Luther King.In a rare statement, Bridgewater tells TMZ, “I do maintain my 100% total and complete … Permalink

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Alleged Travolta Extortionist Maintains Innocence