레이블이 Concert인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시
레이블이 Concert인 게시물을 표시합니다. 모든 게시물 표시

2014년 11월 24일 월요일

Jose Carreras Cancels Concert at Last Minute


Legendary tenor Jose Carreras at the last minute canceled a concert at the Sejong Center for the Performing Arts in Seoul on Sunday, citing health problems.

The concert was called off 30 minutes after it was set to begin and the audience was sent home and given their money back. Carreras completed his scheduled concert on Saturday.

A spokesman for Pop Communication, which organized the concert, said the elderly troubadour contracted laryngitis.

The 2,000-strong audience were largely supportive. One audience member said, "I'm concerned about Carreras' health. I hope he gets well for his next performance."

Carreras (67) famously battled Leukemia in the 1980s. He was last scheduled to perform in Korea in 2011 but canceled with only a week to go.

But the organizers have been criticized for inconsiderate behavior. One person who claimed to have been among the audience posted a message on the Internet saying, "There are rumors that he was in no condition to go on stage, but the organizers prodded him to sing. This is why the cancellation notice came so late as the singer waited to see if he would feel better."

The organizers told the audience during Saturday's concert that Carreras had caught a cold.

In a strange confluence of events, across town the even more revered tenor Placido Domingo was performing to an audience of 10,000 people. The two frequently shared a stage during the massive Three Tenors galas, the third being Luciano Pavarotti.

Classical music fans say it was a hard choice which concert to attend, which is why they felt even more disappointed about the cancellation. A quarter of some 2,750 tickets at the Carreras event were sold as "VIP seats" for a whopping W440,000 (US$1=W1,114).

This is the second time this year that a globally famous singer has canceled a concert here. Paul McCartney was set to give his first concert in Korea in April of this year, but that fell through, also for health reasons. A viral infection also forced the 72-year-old ex-Beatle to cancel concerts in Korea and Japan.

Some prefer singers to cancel in advance rather than give abysmal performances of the kind some superstars have put up here.

Pop diva Mariah Carey bombed in her first concert in 11 years in Seoul, angering fans. She later blamed bad health. The concert started 20 minutes late and she had trouble hitting the high notes for which she is widely admired and parodied.

Whitney Houston also disappointed audiences in Korea with her first and last performance here in 2010. Already ravaged by years of drug addiction, Houston coughed through the concert and her heavy breathing rattled the sound system.


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2013년 6월 26일 수요일

Jared Feldschreiber: No 'Joanie Phonie' Here: Joan Baez Radiates in Newark Concert


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"If you're committed to singing meaningful songs, you also have to be committed to leading a life that backs that up." -Joan Baez

In October 1967, Joan Baez blocked the doorways of the building at the Armed Forces Induction Center in hopes of convincing young potential inductees to not serve in the Vietnam War. As a result, Baez and others, were arrested.

'She would stand there and say 'you don't have to do this.. 'This is a bad thing,' songwriter David Crosby recalled. "And they would spit at her... and call her every name under the sun. And she would keep trying. And every once in a while she would manage to pull a guy out of the line. [After going to jail], she'd get out, go home, take a shower, have a meal.. She'd go right back and start over. That's the kind of courage you don't see often. '

While Joan Baez remains the consummate purveyor and interpreter of folk music, she is also heroic in her commitment to social activism. For over 50 years, along with her musical career, Baez has been on the front line of the civil rights movement, shined a spotlight on the Free Speech Movement, took to the fields with labor leader Cesar Chavez, and joined organized resistance to the Vietnam War.

Baez's musical career began in 1958, at just 17 at the Club 47 in Cambridge, Massachusetts and her subsequent debut at the 1959 Newport Folk Festival catapulted her career. In 1960 she debuted her eponymous LP for Vanguard Records.

The satirical cartoonist Al Capp, creator of the comic strip 'Lil Abner' once tried to castigate Baez as another fly by 'celeb-activist' in his character 'Joanie Phonie,' which appeared in Time Magazine. The character 'Joanie' was an unabashed communist radical who sang songs of class warfare while paradoxically traveling in a limousine, charging astronomical performance fees to impoverished orphans. Baez called Capp's comic strip a 'stupid, vulgar satire' of the anti-war movement. She demanded Capp to make a retraction. Capp never did, saying she "protests about others' rights to protest."

Baez played alongside Bob Dylan at the March on Washington on August 28, 1963 when Martin Luther King delivered his rousing 'I have a Dream' speech. Baez, Dylan, Odetta, Peter, Paul and Mary joined thousands of others, in hopes for social equality for all creeds in America. By the end of the day, an estimated 250,000 people united across race, class and ideological lines participated in the march poured into DC and onto the grounds of the Lincoln Memorial near the Washington Monument.

"When I heard Dr. King speak, I knew this was 'it' for me," Baez said in 2009. 'It' of course being the coalescing her commitment of folk music with social causes. 'The March on Washington was massive. I remember looking out to a sea of people, which grew and grew and grew, to as far as you could see. What an extraordinary gift to be there when Dr. King took off with that speech. I don't remember anyone else who spoke. I'd guess probably most people didn't either," she said.

As part of the civil rights movement, Baez and Dr. King forged a strong bond in the years that followed, even helping him hold down the fort if he was arriving late to marches. This friendship and civil rights partner would last until his assassination in Memphis in April, 1968.

During Wednesday's show in Newark at the Performance Arts Center, Baez's performance was intimate, and she brought heavenly immediacy in her voice. She kept the timelessness in the songs, whether they were written in this decade, last century or in some cases, nearly 300 years ago. While her son David Harris accompanied her on drums, Dirk Powell showed great dexterity as a musician... And then, of course, there was Joan Baez with her ethereal voice and an acoustic guitar.

Baez began with 'Lily of the West,' delivering a most earnest and solemn musical interpretation of an age-old English ballad. She then sang Dylan's 'It's All Over Now Baby Blue,' much to the delight of many which began gently, and beautifully. It even included a comical moment when she imitated Dylan's distinctive twang in two of the song's lines. Baez also sang 'Barbara Allen,' a searing Scottish ballad, which depicts a young man who lies dying for the love of a woman. The song ends with both lovers' graves lying side by side, leaving only 'a rose and a briar.'

Baez also sang Woody Guthrie's 'Deportee,' a song which provided the perfect nexus of the old with the new. Written in 1948, 'Deportee' was a protest song, detailing a plane crash near Los Gatos Canyon outside Fresno, California, resulting in the deaths of 28 migrant farm workers. The song still resonates today, bringing to the forefront the cruelty some Americans behave toward 'illegals.' The immigration reform remains a red-hot issue, so much so that before she before she began her interpretation, she expressed her gratitude to Virginia Senator Tim Kaine for recently reading his speech entirely in Spanish to Congress; an expression of support to a bipartisan immigration bill.

'Let us pause in life's pleasures and count its many tears/while we all sup sorrows with the poor/there's a song that we linger forever in our ears/hard times come again no more,' she sang in 'Hard Times,' a poem written in 1864 by Stephen Foster, with its compassionate, and timeless, lyrics rendered beautifully by Baez's continued concern for the disadvantaged.

Baez also dedicated her performance of "Imagine" to Turkish protesters, who remained committed to a fight for democracy in their country, a cause she knows all too well in her fight for civil rights alongside Martin Luther King, and others. (Baez also released a performance of the song on her website, which includes her reading from a Turkish text).

As protests sweep through Brazil, Turkey, Bulgaria, and all places in between in the past weeks, Joan Chandos Baez remains evermore committed to the universality of social justice. "From San Diego up to Maine, in every mine and mill," as she sang in 'Joe Hill,' Baez remains courageous, sensitive, witty and most importantly, an indispensable cultural icon to stand up to the excesses, greed and injustices of modern times.

'I learned something in there." Joan Baez once said to reporters after being released from an Oakland prison: "You go into jail as a pacifist, you come out a stronger pacifist."

*The exhibit 'Changing America: The Emancipation Proclamation, 1863 and the March on Washington 1963 is currently presented at the Smithsonian National Museum of African American History and Culture through September 7, 2014. The exhibit will 'be accompanied by a series of public programs and lectures exploring the social and political currents' book-ended by the two seminal events in American history. The guitar Joan Baez played at the March on Washington is included in the exhibit.*

Follow Jared Feldschreiber on Twitter: www.twitter.com/jmoshe80

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2013년 6월 2일 일요일

Beyonce Headlines 'Sound Of Change' Concert, With Some Husbandly Help


Girl power ruled at the Sound Of Change concert in London, which Beyonce headlined.

The 'Girls On Top' songstress, who showed off her curves in an embellished leather body suit, was joined by her rapper husband Jay-Z for a duet during her 45-minute set featuring versions of 'Run The World (Girls)', 'Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)', 'Halo' and the Destiny's Child classic 'Survivor'.

beyonce
Beyonce headlined at the Sound of Change concert

"It's time for change. Let's chime for change. This is such an incredible night for me," said the 31-year-old after being introduced by the concert's co-founders Salma Hayek Pinault and Frida Giannini.

Music's hottest names including Jennifer Lopez, Rita Ora and Florence + The Machine, Ellie Goulding, Iggy Azalea and girl group Haim took to the stage at the star-studded show at Twickenham Stadium, along with John Legend, Timbaland and Duran Duran frontman Simon Le Bon.

Prince Harry opened the show with a video welcome before Jessie J, who donned a black sparkly crop top and black trousers, started the evening with 'Price Tag', followed by 'Nobody's Perfect'. Lopez - who was joined by Mary J Blige for 'Come Together' - wowed in an embellished body suit with strategically placed fringing, following her risque performance on ITV show 'Britain's Got Talent'.

madonna
Madonna joined in, encouraging the audience to start "a revolution of love"

Madonna, Blake Lively and husband Ryan Reynolds, James Franco, Jessica Chastain, Freida Pinto and Zoe Saldana were presenters on the night. The fundraising gig, organised by the Gucci-founded charity Chime For Change, Salma Hayek Pinault and Beyonce, raised 4.3 million US dollars (around £2.8 million).

Ora said after her performance: "I loved every minute and the fact that I'm here for a cause I really believe in makes it 10 times better. I have my own separate charity for women, single mothers and children so it's just really important for me to be here."

Other stars paid tribute to their mothers as their inspirational role models. Oscar-nominated actress Chastain revealed: "My mother and my grandmother are my greatest teachers. One of my favourite films I've ever made was The Help, I love working with women so this is a great cause to be involved in."

'Gossip Girl' star Lively said: "My mum came from little to nothing. I've learnt by living by example. Her family has always been her first priority in life. The biggest thing I've learnt from her is she doesn't say no and that's why she has accomplished so much. It can be frustrating when I'm sharing dessert with her!"

Pinto added: "It's important for me to get involved because we want a society that is equal in terms of the education that goes to men and women. We want to be free of discrimination and we want a society that's changing for the better. My mother taught me that."


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J-Lo Branded 'A Diva' By John Legend's Fiancee At Twickenham Concert


Jennifer Lopez has come under fire for the second time in a week, after her arrival on stage at Twickenham Stadium for the Sound for Change concert prompted accusations of diva antics by John Legend's fiancee.

jennifer lopez
Jennifer Lopez gave a show-stopping performance, but someone wasn't happy

Model Chrissy Teigen tweeted her indignation about being shuffled off backstage, where she was watching her fiance Legend perform. Her tweets tell the story...

christine teigen @chrissyteigen
christine teigen I won't get into it but Jennifer Lopez' people need to calm the fuck down.christine teigen @chrissyteigen
christine teigen I love Jennifer Lopez. But as I am sitting and watching John perform, I don't need her people to lay down the j-lo laws.

Lopez gave a show-stopping performance at the Sound for Change concert at Twickenham Stadium, where she was joined on stage by Mary J Blige for 'Come Together'.

And, after the controversy surrounding her revealing outfit last week on 'Britain's Got Talent', the singer was in an embellished body suit, with some very strategically placed fringing.

Madonna, hosting the concert, had asked the audience to join in a revolution of love, and J-Lo added her own message to the crowd: "I believe my girls out there deserve the best education. They deserve the best in health. And I believe in justice for my girls everywhere."

Other headliners included Beyonce with a little help from husband Jay-Z, Rita Ora, Jessie J, Florence Welch and Ellie Goulding. The event was opened by Prince Harry.


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PHOTOS: Beyonce Headlines Charity Concert For Women


LONDON ? Beyonce and a few famous friends ? including John Legend, Jennifer Lopez and Madonna ? turned the home of English rugby into a fortress for women's rights at a star-studded charity concert.

Beyonce headlined a concert at Twickenham rugby stadium in London in support of Chime for Change, a campaign set up to help empower girls and women around the world.

The singer, sporting a slinky leather body suit, had the 50,000-strong crowd in a frenzy when she performed "Crazy In Love" ? joined onstage by husband Jay-Z.

She also performed hits including "Single Ladies (Put A Ring On It)," "Run The World (Girls)," "Halo" and the Destiny's Child classic "Survivor."

"It's time for change. Let's chime for change. This is such an incredible night for me," said the 31-year-old star.

Earlier, Simon Le Bon performed with Timbaland, and J-Lo and Mary J. Blige sang The Beatles' "Come Together," as a raft of stars united for the Sound of Change Live show, which also featured John Legend, Florence + The Machine and Rita Ora.

Madonna, Freida Pinto, Aishwarya Rai, Jada Pinkett Smith, James Franco, Ryan Reynolds, Jessica Chastain and feminist icon Gloria Steinem were among the presenters. Even Prince Harry sent a videotaped message of support.

Beyonce is co-founder, with actress-producer Salma Hayek Pinault and Gucci creative director Frida Giannini, of the charity, which supports projects improving access to education, health care and justice for women.

Partner organizations include UNICEF, the Global Fund for Women and Plan International.

Giannini said she was grateful for Prince Harry's involvement, because "it's very important in projects like that, talking about women that some very strong male personalities are with us."

Hayek Pinault said Beyonce was the best possible ambassador for the cause.

"Do you know that everybody in her band is a girl?" she said. "I mean talk about woman power."

___

Online: www.chimeforchange.org

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