Britney Spears Fun Blog

January 27, 2010

She & Him New Album Details, Tour Dates

Filed under: Britney Spears discography — admin @ 7:05 pm

Folk-pop duo She & Him, a.k.a actress/singer Zooey Deschanel and indie golden boy M. Ward, have released the track listing for their highly-anticipated follow-up to 2008’s Volume One.

Their appropriately titled Volume Two sophomore album will be released March 23 through Merge. It contains 11 original tracks along with covers of NRBQ’s “Ridin’ In My Car” and Skeeter Davis’ “Gonna Get Along Without You.” The record was written by Deschanel and produced by Ward.

The duo are scheduled to play a handful of American dates, including a set at the Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival in April.

Ward released a new solo album called Hold Time last February and also spent 2009 touring with folk supergroup Monsters Of Folk, rounded out by My Morning Jacket singer/guitarist Jim James, Conor Oberst and producer Mike Mogis.

Deschanel married Death Cab For Cutie’s Ben Gibbard and starred in the flick (500) Days Of Summer alongside Joseph Gordon-Levitt (Third Rock From The Sun, 10 Things I Hate About You).
You can see She & Him here:

March 15 Los Angeles, CA @ Largo
March 25 Los Angeles, CA @ El Rey Theatre
March 27 Savannah, GA @ Trustees Theatre
March 29-30 New York, NY @ The Bowery Ballroom
April 15 Pomona, CA @ The Glass House
April 16 Indio, CA @ Empire Polo Field (Coachella Valley Music And Arts Festival)

Here’s the track listing for Volume Two:

“Thieves”
“In The Sun”
“Don’t Look Back”
“Ridin’ In My Car”
“Lingering Still”
“Me And You”
“Gonna Get Along With You Now”
“Home”?
“I’m Gonna Make It Better”
“Sing”
“Over It Over Again”
“Brand New Shoes”
“If You Can’t Sleep”

Peter Gabriel Covers Arcade Fire and More.

Filed under: Britney Spears discography — admin @ 7:04 pm

The concept behind Peter Gabriel’s forthcoming indie rock covers project is an intriguing one: it’s a song swap, Peter singing over orchestral reinterpretations of songs from a staggering list of artists — Bon Iver, Lou Reed, the Mag Fields, Radiohead, Bowie, Talking Heads, etc. — with the intention of creating “a dialogue with the writers,” paving the way for a companion piece in which a string of artists would return the favor. The first installment is Scratch My Back, which Peter put together with Bob Ezrin and John Metcalfe. Our first full listen is this take on Arcade Fire’s “My Body Is A Cage,” and unsurprisingly, its gothic bombast is a fine foil for Metcalfe’s symphonic arrangement. It’s the only song from the collection to feature a choir. Gabriel spoke in depth about the cover in this podcast, calling Arcade Fire a “self-contained” universe, and explaining both his take on the song and intention in reworking it. Here it is in Peter’s words, along with the song itself in Peter’s voice, which is something you should listen to fairly immediately:

It took me awhile to really get what [Arcade Fire] were doing, and I think sometimes that’s a sign of quality … I love this [song] title. I have no idea what Win was writing about here. Whatever they were talking about, for me, I got this picture of The Diving Bell And The Butterfly, and it also made me think about relationship moments when you feel totally unable to go into your body properly, and you feel trapped inside and you can’t communicate the way you need to….

It was a big opportunity for John to throw a lot of paint on the canvas, and I was encouraging him to extend some of the big instrumental sections and add some of these crazy triplets, just really push it to the extreme. It’s the only use of the choir on the record, but I think it’s quite a moody color coming in at the end. But it’s a great piece of writing, and I am now a firm Arcade Fire fan, and this was a great way to get to know their work.

Listen:

The podcast where Peter discusses the project in depth is located here (.xml). Also, you can watch a video trailer for the record featuring select moments from the podcast , an interview with John Metcalfe, and footage from the sessions by clicking this link.
Tracklist aka yes, please:
01 “Heroes” (David Bowie)
02 “The Boy in the Bubble” (Paul Simon)
03 “Mirrorball” (Elbow)
04 “Flume” (Bon Iver)
05 “Listening Wind” (Talking Heads)
06 “The Power of the Heart” (Lou Reed)
07 “My Body Is a Cage” (Arcade Fire)
08 “The Book of Love” (The Magnetic Fields)
09 “I Think It’s Going to Rain Today” (Randy Newman)
10 “Après moi” (Regina Spektor)
11 “Philadelphia” (Neil Young)
12 “Street Spirit (Fade Out)” (Radiohead)

Backstreet will have the album in on (or around) February 16th (pre-ordering w/ us is a good idea)

MTV VMA Awards

Filed under: Britney Spears discography — admin @ 7:02 pm

Celebrity Royale has your daily dose of todays hottest celebrity gossip news and dirt.

Visit Celebrity Royale now for more of today’s headlines.
Britney Spears: “…I looked like a fat pig!”
13 сентября 2007 г. 9:14
After Britney Spears Opening Performance at this years MTV VMA Awards ran back stage following her performance and was heard screaming…


“Oh, my God, I looked like a fat pig! I looked like a fat pig!”

- Britney Spears, screaming backstage after her washed out VMA “performance” – according to the new issue of US Weekly.

Here are my thoughts. Britney Spears is now 25, and has had two kids, she is no longer 18 and super tiny and “innocent”. She has gone downhill and let herself go. I could care less if she has two kids. Women all across America have had two and three kids and have a lot less money and time than Britney Spears to get back in shape.

Yes, she is fat. Yes she looks like Ms. Piggy.

I am glad she finally came to a realization that she was fat. I am still waiting on her to realize a few more things too.

1. Britney Spears is a bad mother
2. Her Music is Boring
3. She needs to give up her music career
4. Try and be a role model
5. Her VMA performance sucked

1998–2000: …Baby One More Time and Oops!… I Did It Again

Filed under: Britney Spears discography — admin @ 6:57 pm

Spears released her debut single, “…Baby One More Time”, in October 1998 which peaked at number-one on the Billboard Hot 100 in January 1999 and topped the chart for two weeks.[21][22] It opened at number-one in the UK Singles Chart selling over 460,000 copies, a record for a female act at the time,[23] and became the top-selling single of 1999[24] and the 25th most successful song of all time in British chart history with over 1.45 million units sold.[23] Gillian G. Gaar, author of She’s a Rebel: The History of Women in Rock & Roll (2002), documented that “eyebrows were raised over the schoolgirl-in-heat persona Spears projected in her [music video for ...Baby One More Time], along with an increasingly revealing series of stage outfits”.[25] Spears’s debut album …Baby One More Time peaked at number one on the Billboard 200 in January 1999.[26] Rolling Stone magazine, in a review of the album, wrote: “While several Cherion-crafted kiddie-funk jams serve up beefy hooks, shameless schlock slowies, like [']E-Mail My Heart,['] are pure spam”.[27] NME commented “[Spears's debut album and its title-track] are the kind of soullessness that saturates Stateside charts and consists of nothing but over-chewed bubblegum beats and saccharine sensibilities”.[28] In contrast, Stephen Thomas Erlewine of Allmusic wrote: “Like many teen pop albums, …Baby One More Time has its share of well-crafted filler, but the singles, combined with Britney’s burgeoning charisma, make this a pretty great piece of fluff”.[29] …Baby One More Time was later certified fourteen times platinum by the Recording Industry Association of America, denoting fourteen million units shipped within the United States.[30] Spears posed for the cover of Rolling Stone magazine in April 1999, shot by photographer David LaChapelle.[31] Geoff Boucher of The Los Angeles Times reported, “there was no mistaking the titillation factor in the recent Spears cover story and accompanying photos in the April 15 issue of Rolling Stone, which sent eyebrows arching throughout the music industry, where several executives half-jokingly called it “child pornography”.[32] Gillian G. Gaar reported, “The American Family Association charged that the pictures, which showed Spears in push-up bras and a minuscule pair of shorts with ‘Baby’ in rhinestones on the bottom, presented a ‘disturbing mix of childhood innocence and adult sexuality’ and asked that all ‘God-loving Americans’ boycott stores carrying her albums”.[25] More controversy arose when Spears declared that she would “remain a virgin until marriage”.[33] This pledge has been questioned due to her apparently sexual relationship with fellow pop singer Justin Timberlake.[34][35]

In late 1999, Spears appeared in the teen sitcom, Sabrina, the Teenage Witch and performed the song “(You Drive Me) Crazy”; this cameo was a cross-promotion for the film Drive Me Crazy, which starred Sabrina’s Melissa Joan Hart and was named after the song.[36] In December 1999, she won four Billboard Music Awards, including Female Artist of the Year. A month later, she received the Favorite Pop/Rock New Artist award at the American Music Awards.[37]

Following the success of her previous album, Spears released the album Oops!… I Did It Again in May 2000. It debuted at number one in the U.S. by selling 1,319,193 units during its first week of sales, breaking the SoundScan record for the highest album sales in its debut week by any solo artist.[38] The RIAA awarded the album with a diamond certification with over 10 million copies sold in the U.S.[39][40][41] Allmusic gave it awarded the album 4 out of 5 stars, saying that the album “has the same combination of sweetly sentimental ballads and endearingly gaudy dance-pop that made “…Baby One More Time.”[42] Rolling Stone gave the album 3.5 stars out of 5 by noting the album as “fantastic pop cheese” and “Britney’s demand for satisfaction is complex, fierce and downright scary.”[43] The album’s lead single “Oops!… I Did It Again” broke the record for most radio station additions in a single day, and quickly became a top ten hit in the U.S. and other countries.[44] The same year, Spears launched her first world tour, the “Oops!… I Did It Again World Tour”. During the tour, she made a stop in New York for the 2000 MTV Video Music Awards. As part of her performance, she ripped off a black suit to reveal a provocative nude-colored and crystal-adorned outfit that generated much controversy.[45] Spears earned two Billboard Music Awards for Oops!… I Did It Again.[46]

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