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British super group Oasis is set to play their first-ever gigs in China by adding Beijing and Shanghai to their current world tour.

The boys will rock the Beijing Capital Gymnasium on April 3 and the Shanghai Grand Stage on April 5. Ticket prices for the concerts range from 200 to 1600 yuan, with booking now available through Emma Ticketmaster on emma.cn.

The song line up will feature tracks from their latest album, \”Dig out Your Soul\”, and hit singles like \”Wonderwall\”, reported sina.com.

The tour\’s Asia leg will also include a stop at the AsiaWorld Arena in Hong Kong on April 7, as announced by the band on their official website. This will be their third visit to Hong Kong, having performed concerts there in 1998 and 2006.

Released in October 2008, \”Dig out Your Soul\” is Oasis\’ seventh studio album.

The band embarked on the world tour last August in Seattle, and is expected to continue touring for eighteen months.

(CRI January 23, 2009)

Representatives of Rod Stewart and the Red Hot Chili Peppers\’ Flea have denied reports that the Faces are reuniting after more than 30 years for an album as well as a tour with Flea on bass.

Stewart\’s spokesperson told Billboard that \”there are no plans for a Faces reunion tour this year.\” A spokesperson for Flea told Billboard the musician \”knows nothing\” of a Faces tour.

Guitarist Ron Wood, a member of the Rolling Stones since the Faces split up in 1975, reportedly told the U.K.\’s Daily Mirror that he and Stewart wrote an album\’s worth of new material during a Christmas vacation, and that Flea would be participating in an upcoming tour. But the online version of the piece has since disappeared from the Daily Mirror Web site.

Rumors have swirled since the fall that Stewart, Wood, Ian McLagan and Kenney Jones were planning to tour again. The musicians reportedly rehearsed last year with Stewart touring bassist Conrad Korsch filling the role of Ronnie Lane, who died in 1997. But a recent report in the New York Post suggested the members didn\’t get along during the process and that a tour seemed unlikely.

Keyboardist McLagan is already booked for a spring North American tour in support of his new album, \”Never Say Never,\” due March 3 from 00:02:59 Records.

There have been a handful of near-Faces reunions since the band broke up, including at a 1986 Stewart concert at London\’s Wembley Stadium. The surviving members have performed together in various incomplete incarnations in recent years, such as when Wood and McLagan joined Stewart at the Hollywood Bowl in Los Angeles in 2004.

(China Daily/Agencies January 23, 2009)

The Parents Television Council is warning parents about the Britney Spears song \”If U Seek Amy\” and urging radio stations not to broadcast it because the nonprofit organization believes it \”would violate the broadcast indecency law\” if aired between 6 a.m. and 10 p.m.

Saying the title phrase quickly out loud produces a sound akin to spelling out the F-word, said PTC president Tim Winter. \”There is no misinterpreting the lyrics to this song, and it\’s certainly not about a girl named Amy,\” he said of the track, the third single from Spears\’ new Jive album, \”Circus.\”

\”It\’s one thing for a song with these lyrics to be included on a CD so that fans who wish to hear it can do so, but it\’s an entirely different matter when this song is played over the publicly-owned airwaves, especially at a time when children are likely to be in the listening audience,\” Winter says.

Founded in 1995, the PTC describes itself as \”a nonpartisan education organization advocating responsible entertainment.\” Jive was unavailable for comment on the PTC\’s advisory.

The controversy isn\’t stopping U.S. radio from playing \”If You Seek Amy.\” Six top 40 stations have the song in rotation this week, enough to place the track at No. 92 on the Billboard Pop 100 chart. Leading the pack is WFLZ-Tampa, Fla., which has played it 19 times.

\”We\’re confident the version of the song we air is not crossing any lines,\” program director Tommy Chuck told Billboard.com, adding that WFLX plays a Jive-created edit of the song that changes \”Seek\” to \”See\” as well as a jokey version in which morning host MJ shouts his name every time the word \”Amy\” appears.

Digitally, \”Amy\” has sold 107,000 copies in the United States, according to Nielsen SoundScan.

(China Daily/Agencies January 22, 2009)

Soul singer Duffy and Coldplay dominate the nominations for Britain\’s prestigious music awards.

Coldplay\’s first album in three years, \”Viva La Vida\” and Duffy\’s \”Rockferry\” are both nominated for the title of best British album at the Brit Awards.

Coldplay will also compete with Elbow, Girls Aloud, Radiohead and revived boyband Take That for the title of best British Group.

Kayne West, Beyonce and Kings of Leon are nominated for the international categories.

The Brit Awards are the British equivalent of the Grammys and the nominations were announced Tuesday. The winners will be announced in London on Feb. 18.

Most winners are selected by a vote of over 1,000 industry members and include representatives from record companies, retailers and disc jockeys.

(China Daily/Agencies January 21, 2009)

Singer Kay Tse performs at the 31st annual Top Ten Chinese Gold Songs Awards in Hong Kong on January 18, 2009.

Singer Kay Tse performs at the 31st annual Top Ten Chinese Gold Songs Awards in Hong Kong on January 18, 2009. [Tungstar/ent.sina.com.cn] 

Hong Kong singer Kay Tse has broken a record on the music scene for her speedy win of the most coveted local award.

Thirty-one-year-old Tse, who popped onto the scene in 2005, won the Four Stations Media Award at the 31st annual Top Ten Chinese Gold Songs Awards on Sunday. The media award is given to the musician who garners the most combined awards over the previous year.

Tse scooped three honors, including a Gold Song for \”Wedding Invitation Street\” at Sunday\’s awards, which wrapped up the 2008 music awards season in Hong Kong.

That brought Tse\’s total number of awards to 16, beating veterans Joey Yung and Eason Chan, both of whom bagged 15 trophies in 2008.

Singers Eason Chan (left) and Joey Yung accept their awards at the 31st annual Top Ten Chinese Gold Songs Awards in Hong Kong on January 18, 2009.

Singers Eason Chan (left) and Joey Yung accept their awards at the 31st annual Top Ten Chinese Gold Songs Awards in Hong Kong on January 18, 2009. [ent.sina.com.cn]

Yung and Chan were respectively named best female and male singer of the year at Sunday\’s awards.

Other honorees included pop stars Miriam Yeung and Leo Ku, as well as celebrated lyricist Albert Leung.

(CRI January 20, 2009)

Justin Timberlake is set to duet with Leona Lewis.

The two pop superstars plan to collaborate for a cover of Whitney Houston\’s 1992 worldwide hit single \”I Will Always Love You\” – originally penned by Dolly Parton.

A source told Britain\’s The Sun newspaper: \”They will record the track in the next few months and are just waiting for a period when they\’re both free to go into the studio.

\”Leona and Justin are huge fans of each other\’s music and are raring to go.\”

\”SexyBack\” singer Justin has previously admitted how desperate he is to work with the British star after they met at his concert \”Justin and Friends\” last year.

He said: \”I\’m going to go pimp myself to Leona Lewis, because I think she\’s an amazing singer.\”

Meanwhile, Leona has been banned from touring by her manager Simon Cowell – who discovered her on UK TV talent show \”The X Factor\” – because she is too \”shy\”.

A source said: \”Although Simon believes in Leona as a world-class solo singer, he still feels she does not have enough confidence to play to large crowds on her own.

\”Leona is Simon\’s little baby and he is very aware of how shy she is.\”

(China Daily/Agencies January 13, 2009)

 

Lisa Ono is known as the \”Queen of bossa nova\” in China and her adoring public will no doubt be clamoring for tickets when she performs her first concert in the capital city this weekend.

The Japanese songbird is celebrating the 20th anniversary of her musical career and will take the stage at Beijing\’s Olympic Sports Center Gymnasium tomorrow, as part of her 2009 World Tour Live.

She will then fly south to play the Shanghai International Jazz Festival, appearing at the 8,000-seat Shanghai Grand Stage on Jan 16.

Ono is back by public demand. At her two concerts in Shanghai\’s Fuxing Park last year, the 1,900 venue was sold out, hence the larger space this time around.

How the 46-year-old singer became the \”Queen of bossa nova\” is a curious story.

Born in Sao Paolo, Brazil, Ono moved to Tokyo, aged 10, where her father opened a club and she started singing and playing acoustic guitar.

She later became a songwriter and \”popular music ambassador\” for Brazil, specializing in bossa nova, a musical style that evolved in the late 1950s and has become part of the standard jazz repertoire.

\”When I first heard bossa nova I was very young and fell in love with it. For me, it is the air that I breathe,\” Ono says.

She became a well-known figure in Japan because of her music, initially, then starred in a number of commercials that raised her profile further.

She released her debut album, Catupiry, in 1989 and since then has released about one album a year for the past two decades.

She has won various jazz awards in Japan and Brazil and extended her fan base in Europe with a France-inspired disc In My Island.

Last year, Jamabalaya – Bossa Americana went platinum in Taiwan, consolidating her status as Asia\’s prime exponent of bossa nova, on account of her crystal clear vocals and upbeat easy listening arrangements.

Ono sings primarily in Portuguese but impressed her Shanghai audiences last year with a version of the Chinese classic Ye Lai Xiang. She is expected to cover the song again in Beijing.

\”It was the first time I had sung bossa nova in Chinese. It seems the audiences loved the rearrangement,\” Ono says. \”The Ye Lai Xiang melody is sweet, soft and fits bossa nova, which is free and relaxed.\”

(China Daily January 9, 2009)

Hip-hop and remixed dance music are the main sounds in Shanghai\’s nightlife, but jazz has found its lower-key and very solid niche.

Newcomers are often surprised by the few long-standing and vigorous clubs and the outstanding musicians from all over the world.

American tenor and soprano-saxophonist Alec Haavik was amazed by Shanghai four years ago when he came on a three-month performance contract. Now, he speaks fluent Chinese and has become a highlight in the jazz scene.

Haavik performs at the famous JZ club every Thursday and will hold a concert this Sunday at the Shanghai Oriental Art Center in Pudong.

The 38-year-old musician, best known for his improvisation and explosive energy at live performances, will challenge himself by restructuring classical music at the concert, titled \”Life Death and Everything Else.\”

\”The concert is a wonderful opportunity for me to explore possibilities and challenge myself. My goal has been to restructure classical works. So I\’m not performing it as it was written,\” says Haavik. \”Rather, I\’m taking the compositional ideas and rearranging them so that the piece contains both the original meaning of the composer and also something from my perspective.\”

For the concert, he is improvising on works that he always loved – Messiaen\’s \”Quartet for the End of Time,\” which Messiaen and his friends first performed in 1941 in a German prison camp for 5,000 fellow prisoners; Schoenberg\’s \”String Trio\” completed in 22 days after his heart attack and near-death experience and Bach\’s beautiful spiritual tribute, \”Jesu, Joy of Man\’s Desire.\”

Haavik will add two pieces that he composed for the birth of his son and daughter – they include the recorded sound of the children\’s heartbeats in the womb. The repertoire is strikingly different from what he usually performs at JZ as part of the band Alec Haavik Friction Five.

\”My life\’s goal is expression through music, and then you\’ll ask, \’What are you going to express?\’ So it\’s really interesting for me to put these pieces together, the music I love, and the music coming out from my own experience,\” says Haavik.

Holding a master\’s degree from the Manhattan School of Music, Haavik played in both rock bands and jazz bars in New York City before moving to Shanghai. The saxophonist got interested in music in elementary school and has played many different instruments and styles.

As a jazz musician, Haavik acknowledges his rock influences and he masterfully adds raw and funky rock flavor into the free jazz genre. His first CD \”Rocks\” blends the styles of Led Zeppelin, Steve Lacy and John Coltrane. And he even recorded a Led Zeppelin song \”Four Sticks\” in his second CD to pay tribute to his favorite rock \’n\’ roll band.

\”I did play in rock bands for a while after graduation and rock music is also powerfully expressive. But jazz is a really complete human expression through music with a lot of improvisations, indicating a lot more open meaning and space of expression,\” Haavik explains.

He sums up his four years in Shanghai as \”fantastic\” and plans to stay for a long time with his family. He was attracted by the city and the jazz scene since he first performed in 2005.

\”It\’s a very fulfilling time for me to work on my arts and also have exchanges with all the great musicians I have met in Shanghai. Great musicians from all over the world are coming here. And I want to be part of a great music community for all of my life,\” concludes Haavik.

Date: January 11, 3pm

Address: 425 Dingxiang Rd, Pudong

Tickets: 100-200 yuan

Tel: 962-388, 6854-1234

(Shanghai Daily January 8, 2009)

Taylor Swift

The year is off to a bad start for the music industry with U.S. album sales off 6.2 percent from the first week of 2008, according to data issued Wednesday.

About 8.5 million units were sold during the week ended January 4, down from almost 9.1 million this time last year, and also down 50 percent from the holiday-boosted previous week, said tracking firm Nielsen SoundScan.

Album sales for 2008 fell for the seventh time in eight years, off 14 percent from 2007, the firm reported last week.

Country star Taylor Swift is doing her best to keep the industry afloat. Her second album, \”Fearless,\” notched a fifth week atop the Billboard 200 on Wednesday, moving 90,000 copies in the latest sales period. That\’s the first time a No. 1 album has sold fewer than 100,000 units since the week ended February 3, 2008, when Alicia Keys\’ \”As I Am\” shifted 61,000.

Beyonce\’s \”I Am … Sasha Fierce\” held at No. 2 last week with 77,000. Kanye West\’s \”808s and Heartbreak\” rose two places to No. 3 with 71,000. The \”Twilight\” soundtrack was also up two places, to No. 4, with 66,000.

Nickelback\’s \”Dark Horse\” fell one to No. 5 with 64,000, while Britney Spears\’ \”Circus\” slid three to No. 6 with a couple hundred copies fewer than that, also at 64,000. Keyshia Cole\’s \”A Different Me\” kept the No. 7 spot warm with 54,000.

Jamie Foxx\’s \”Intuition\” rose one to No. 8 with 45,000, flip-flopping with the multi-artist \”NOW 29\” hits compilation, which sold 44,000.

An anomaly amongst overall post-holiday declines, the Target exclusive \”All Wrapped Up,\” featuring Christmas songs from the Jonas Brothers and Miley Cyrus, among others, jumped 78 places to No. 10. The disc, which was deeply discounted after the holiday season, sold 40,000 copies.

The only debut among the top 50 was \”The 99 Most Essential Beethoven Masterpieces\” at No. 29 with 21,000 copies. The collection sold for just $1.99 at Amazon.com\’s MP3 store.

(China Daily/Agencies January 8, 2009)

A wobbly table in a blue wooden house overlooking silver birch trees is witnessing the worldwide revival of interest in the work of an often underrated 19th century Russian composer.

Pyotr Tchaikovsky, whose \”Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies\” in the \”Nutcracker\” ballet delights children and adults alike at this time of year, wrote his later works at the table in his last residence in the small town of Klin, about 85 kilometers northwest of Moscow.

In grounds which are also home to a white pagoda and barn and stables, surrounded by Soviet-era prefabricated homes, the number of Tchaikovsky fans who are ushered along the house\’s squeaky oak floors is steadily increasing.

Last year there were 86,000 visitors, up from 60,000 in 2003.

Even more are expected this year, said Natalia Gorbunova, chief researcher and head of what is now a museum.

\”Tchaikovsky\’s music is undergoing a revival now, in our time, because his music is loved by the whole world, and this love continues,\” she said.

While nostalgia for Soviet days is making headlines from Russia and Tchaikovsky\’s work has been derided by some critics as populist, enthusiasts say its appeal is timeless and intimate.

Visitor Liudmila Soltokova, a retired engineer from Tchaikovsky\’s birthplace of Votkinsk, a small town about 1,000 kilometers east of Moscow near the Ural mountains, said she was fulfilling a lifelong dream to come to the house.

\”His music is simply amazing, it touches your soul,\” she said, glancing at his shiny onyx piano royale, in the center of a large room heavily decorated with framed black-and-white photographs of his relatives.

Full houses

Every year renowned musicians and composers come to Klin to play the piano for the May 7 birthday of the composer, who lived from 1840 to 1893. Gorbunova noted the number of Europeans and Asians, particularly Korean, is up.

This winter, Moscow has been alive with his work. \”Eugene Onegin,\” \”The Queen of Spades\” and \”Swan Lake\” opened to full houses; \”The Nutcracker\” plays at a theater named after him.

Berlin\’s Staatsoper presented a new production of \”Eugene Onegin,\” with conductor Daniel Barenboim, while a \”Revealing Tchaikovsky\” festival at the Southbank Centre in London sought to dispel some enduring myths about him.

An alcoholic and likely homosexual, Tchaikovsky\’s works including the \”Sleeping Beauty\” and \”Swan Lake,\” the First Piano Concerto and opera house standards like \”Eugene Onegin\” and \”The Queen of Spades\” earned him enormous popularity among audiences in his lifetime.

That prompted some to dismiss his work as vulgar and cheap, but it was in the house in Klin that he wrote his wrenching, passionate but despairing final Sixth Symphony, which he named \”Pathetique.\”

\”In the Russian pantheon he is sitting right at the very top of the pyramid,\” Vladimir Jurowski, the Russian-born principal conductor of the London Philharmonic Orchestra, said.

The international Tchaikovsky classical music competition in Moscow celebrated its half-century in spring with concerts played to sold-out halls.

Separately, children from across Russia\’s 11 time zones drew impressions of Tchaikovsky which were exhibited in a Moscow museum.

\”No one can be indifferent to Tchaikovsky\’s music,\” Muscovite pianist Mikhail Mordvinov, 31, said.

Summons listeners

Gorbunova, who decided to head the museum 10 years ago after she heard Tchaikovsky\’s \”Iolanta\”opera, also written in the house, said: \”His music summons listeners from deep within their souls. He wrote it for his nearest and dearest, and it is so gentle, that it attracts many more.\”

The Russian state helps with the museum\’s upkeep, and two years ago donated a metal statue of a somber-looking Tchaikovsky in his later years which stands in the grounds.

Tchaikovsky is criticized by some because his tunes are almost too good, Jurowski said. For example, it can be hard to escape \”Dance of the Sugar Plum Fairies\” at Christmas.

\”He\’s not the only one. Mozart did the same thing, Verdi did the same thing,\” Jurowski said.

\”It is a rare gift which is not always a necessary feature of a great composer.

\”Unfortunately he is recognized as a great composer mostly for that particular gift of his and people tend to overlook or fail to see the mastery of his composition.\”

Musicologist and composer Gerard McBurney, involved in the London \”Revealing Tchaikovsky\” program, is emphatic.

\”He is a much, much greater and more complex composer than most people understand him to be. I put him very, very high up indeed. He is the (Charles) Dickens of 19th-century music.

(Shanghai Daily January 4, 2009)

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