Tag Archives: Bruce Springsteen

Entertainment Express: Oz The Great and Powerful, Stevie Wonder, Bruce Springsteen, National Book Awards, Stephanie Forrester

 

* Disney has released a second trailer for Sam Raimi’s Oz The Great and Powerful, giving a little more insight into the film that focusses on Oscar Diggs, played by James Franco, the Kansas circus magician before he becomes known as the Wizard.

* Stevie Wonder will perform at the American Music Awards this weekend, in tribute to the show’s creator and American Bandstand host Dick Clark, who died in April.

* Ridley Scott is looking for Bruce Springsteen fans to help make a crowd-sourced documentary about the Jersey-born musician. Springsteen will also join a line-up of stars for a Superstorm Sandy relief concert at Madison Square Garden in December.

* The National Book Awards has honored both longtime writers and new authors – Louise Erdrich won the fiction award for The Round House, while Katherine Boo’s debut, Beyond the Beautiful Forevers picked up non-fiction.

* Soapie fans are preparing to say goodbye to Susan Flannery, aka Stephanie Forrester, who’ll retire from a legendary career on one of the longest-running daytime dramas.

Entertainment Express: Alf Kumalo, Yash Chopra, Bruce Springsteen, Adele, Justin Timberlake & Jessica Biel

 

* Legendary South African photographer Alf Kumalo passed away on Sunday, after losing his battle to cancer. From Ali to Mandela, Makeba to Masekela, Kumalo captured it all.

* Bollywood has bid farewell to 80-year old filmmaker Yash Chopra, who is credited with launching the careers of heavyweights Amitabh Bachan and Shah Rukh Khan.

* With just two weeks to go until the US Presidential Election, Bruce Springsteen will give a free concert at an Obama for America rally in the swing state of Virginia on Tuesday.

* 2012′s CMJ Music Festival came to an end this weekend, with over 1300 bands playing all over the city, taking their turns to win over audience affection.

* Songstress Adele gave birth to her little, while Jessica Biel and Justin Timberlake spent their first weekend together as man and wife.

Pic: From Alf Kumalo’s book, Through My Lens

Entertainment Express: Emmys, Green Day, Bruce Springsteen, Forest Whitaker, Mumford and Sons

 

* The 64th Primetime Emmys handed out top honours for TV’s best comedy, drama, variety and reality shows.

* Green Day’s Bille Joe Armstrong has checked into rehab, following at outburst at the iHeart Radio gig in Las Vegas this weekend.

* Bruce Springsteen turned 63 and invited 60 000 fans to his birthday party in New Jersey on Saturday night.

* Oscar-winning actor Forest Whitaker launched his PeaceEarth initiative last week, and spoke at Sunday’s session of the Social Good Summit.

* Mumford and Sons release their new album today, after imitating the Beatles and performing on SNL this past weekend.

Pic: emmys.tv

 

Entertainment Express: Mariah Carey, The Dark Knight Rises, Bruce Springsteen, Lady Gaga, Toronto International Film Festival

Bruce Willis, Joseph Gordon-Levitt
 
* Looper, the sci-fi thriller starring Bruce Willis and Joseph Gordon-Levitt, will open this year’s Toronto International Film Festival.

* Steven Tyler and J-Lo are out, Mariah Carey is in for Season 12 of American Idol.

* Warner Bros, the studio behind The Dark Knight Rises, is making a ‘substantial’ donation to those who were affected by the theater shooting in Aurora.

* Bruce Springsteen has admitted, in an extensive piece in the New Yorker, that he battled depression in the 80s.

* Lady Gaga previewed a new song for a few New York fans by playing it out of her car stereo.

SXSW – There’s A Reason They Call Him The Boss

20120311-111614.jpg

The highlight of this SXSW Festival was announced a few months ago, and it’s the reason I’ve been looking forward to coming to Austin for the event: Bruce Springsteen’s keynote address. It was everything I hoped for and more. The line to get into it was snaking around the convention center 2 hours before he was due to speak, but it was well-worth getting into the auditorium earlier, especially since there was a tribute to the influential singer-songwriter Woody Guthrie who died in the 60s, highlighting the incredible power of his lasting legacy.

From Austin’s own Eliza Gilkyson to Jimmy LaFave and Spanish heart-throb Juanes (who sang at Mandela Day in New York in 2009), the set was a beautiful and moving testament to the man whose music is archived in the Library of Congress and the whole auditorium sang along to This Land is Your Land. Truly amazing. It was only fitting that the Guthrie tribute took place before Springsteen spoke – the singer was deeply influenced by the folk musician.

When Springsteen took to the stage, he was self-deprecating, humorous and sincere. Surprisingly, I also found him to look younger than I thought he would. He had the crowd spell-bound, listening to the evolution of his music career – how it all began and the way the various influences shaped and shifted him. And, grabbing a guitar from off stage, Springsteen illustrated the highlights along the way.

Pic: SXSW/Brian Brazer

I tried to tweet as much as I could because it truly was something worth sharing. Springsteen started by saying that when he first picked up a guitar there were only 10 years of rock history to draw on and that it was amazing to see what was happening in Austin now. He proceeded to list all the various genres and sub-genres (like black death metal) that are on display here now. It had the audience in stitches!

Some of my favourite quotes from Springsteen on his influences:

- on Elvis: “Inspired by the passion in Elvis’ pants, I wrapped my 6 year old fingers around my 1st guitar.”

- on Roy Orbison: “The coolest uncool guy you’d ever seen…sticking his knife deep into the belly of your teenage fears.”

- on Phil Spector: “If Roy Orbison was opera, Phil Spector was symphonies. He taught me sound, sound, sound is its own language.

- on The Beatles: “Looking at their album cover was like seeing the silent gods of Olympus; they were so cool. They had me thinking I’m never going to get there.”

- on The Animals: “They struck me deep as the first class-conscious album I’d ever heard.”

- on his admiration for R&B: “I went from being in awe of Sex Pistols punk to Motown soul music – adult music, sung by adults, not teenagers.”

- on James Brown: “Underrated, even still today.”

- on Bob Dylan: “He gave us the words to understand our hearts; he is the father of my musical country.”

- on country music: “The working man’s blues; full of the small+big things that allow you to put one foot in front of another.”

- on Woody Guthrie: I wanted an answer to Hank Williams’ question: why does my bucket have a hole in it…and I found Woody Guthrie, the ghost in the machine, and his fatalism was tempered with practical idealism.”

And then, The Boss’ words of wisdom for new artists – and the rest of us too:

New bands, learn how to bring it live and then do it night after night. Your audience will remember you. That was my meal ticket…

Rumble young musicians, rumble.

Open your ears, and open your hearts.

Don’t take yourself too seriously and take yourself as seriously as death itself. Don’t worry. Worry your ass off. Have iron-clad confidence, but doubt. It keeps you awake and alert. Believe you are the baddest ass in town and, you suck. It keeps you honest. Be able to keep two have the ability to hold two contradictory ideas in your heart and head at all times…if it doesn’t drive you crazy it will make you strong. And stay hard, stay hungry, stay alive.

And when you walk on stage tonight to bring the noise, treat it like it’s all we have. Then remember that it’s only rock & roll.

If you’re a fan, you’ll want to watch this in its entirety:

Surrendering to the Sound: U2 in New Jersey

The Claw

You can know all the facts about the U2 360 Degree tour and its signature stage, the “claw”.

That it’s a 90-foot tall steel structure, designed to support 180 tons.

That it takes four days to build.

That it’s allowed U2 to break all concert attendance records.

You can know that the band has 3 custom-built claw stages for their tour, and that as one is being dismantled, another is being erected.

But you cannot really know anything until you’ve actually seen the spectacular four-legged contraption for yourself, lighting up the night sky, illuminating hit song after hit song.

You don’t know anything until you’ve see the “claw” send U2’s concert into orbit. Continue reading